Site icon Steven J. Venturino

Composition Time

This is from William Empson’s Seven Types of Ambiguity (originally published in 1930; quoted from the revised third edition, page 22). It’s a statement about the difference between crafting and experiencing any work of art. Empson argues that the Romantic poets created inferior poetry because they rushed the process of writing poetry. They wanted to put their ideas “straight to paper” and ignored the rule that artistic work “does not feel like a taste in the head while it is being done,” even if the goal is to give someone (even yourself) this taste in the head when the work is finished.

As for me, I like the Romantic poets, but I see Empson’s point about process-versus-product in general. In fact, Empson’s intentionally convoluted prose here reminds me of Gertrude Stein’s discussion in “Composition as Explanation,” first published in 1926. Here’s an excerpt focusing on the reality of the product when it is consumed (when you read the poem or book), compared to the strange (but real) reality of the work-in-process. It’s best, by the way, to read this aloud until you figure out where the emphases and pauses go. As you stop, start, start again, and reread, you actually seem to experience Stein’s point that meaning depends on the “living that everyone is doing”:

print
Exit mobile version