In the Duino Elegies,
Rilke expresses the role of time in the life of the artistic work. One day when
we discussed it in class I had a really magnificent experience. The British
author Colin Wilson refers to it as “breathing space”. We spoke about that moment
when the bow is pulled completely back, at the fullness of tension, and there
is a split second of nothingness when the draw is released, but the arrow has
not yet begun to fly. When a person is
going to jump into a pool, there’s the moment when they’ve begun their thrust,
when they’ve decided to jump, sprung forward, there is the moment of tension
between the decision and the action. There is the moment when the very tip of
their first toe touches the water, but is not yet wet—not yet submerged. T.S. Eliot referred to this as “the still
point at the center of the universe,” like an axis around which all of
existence revolves. When we discussed this in class I had this sensation that
Colin Wilson expressed—this notion of “breathing space”. This is a feeling one
gets when one transcends ordinary reality, and as it persists one achieves a
state Wilson referred to as “Faculty X”.
Faculty X is the place to be.
According to Wilson, and Rilke, all great art arrives from this place: a place
that exists beyond time. Rilke said, in the Seventh Elegy, “Truly being here is glorious.” The
italics were from Rilke himself. To my mind, truly being here is dramatically different than just being here.
And this is where Rilke says the
angels live for eternity: beyond time, truly
here. This is a state of heightened consciousness, of hyper-reality, and of
true understanding. Eliot wrote, in the
Four Quartets, “Love is most nearly itself when here and now cease to matter.”
So love exists beyond time, along with other mythic, heroic, and ethereal
qualities.
Could it be that everything we perceive as reality is only a projection
from this deeper realm, but it’s snapped into the finite via our imperfect
senses? My good friend Tyler McDonald seems to think so. He talks about how,
when we perceive something, our perception is only an illusion—or, a way to
make the infinite, finite.
So I wonder whether this is the
responsibility that has fallen on the poet: to bring the infinite a little
closer. The poet creates linguistic structures which convey hyper-real sensory
experiences, thereby bringing us a bit closer to that realm of angels, and to
Faculty X. But how do we arrive there, and how can we stay? Or can we? Is this
a domain only habitable by hyper-real entities? Can man ascend to such a high
state of consciousness that this is where he always exists? (Women too, of
course.) Eliot asked, “Where is the summer? That unimaginable Zero summer?”
Does it exist, and can we arrive there?
Rilke seems to think we cannot. In
the Ninth Elegy he asks, “Why then have to be human—and escaping from fate,
keep longing for fate?” So, why do I enter heightened consciousness for a
little while, only to be snapped back unwittingly? He answers his own question
a few stanzas down: “Because truly being
here is so much; because everything here apparently needs us, this fleeting
world, which in some way keeps calling to us.” This requires us to question a
statement from the First Elegy, when Rilke said, “We are not really at home in
our interpreted world.” He seems to think we can enter the angelic realm for a
moment at a time, but then we snap back into our reality, because, in a way, we
are needed here. This is where the philosophy of Tyler McDonald comes in. When
we arouse Faculty X we see with the eyes of angels: we see the infinite, if
only for a few beautiful, fleeting moments. But our sensory perception of the
hyper-real, the extra-dimensional leaves us struggling with our language, our
“shabby equipment”, Eliot called it. We can only explain our experience through
metaphors, and metaphors are extraordinarily imprecise, inaccurate, and clunky.
“Strange to see meanings that clung
together once, floating away in every direction,” wrote Rilke. That’s one of my
favorite passages I’ve ever read anywhere, by anybody. It rings so true. One of my hobbies is
boundary dissolution—so to see the experience articulated so beautifully—well,
it feels good.
So what is this extra-dimensionality? After
all, “Trees do exist. The houses we live in still stand.” T.S. Eliot phrases it
perfectly, (as per usual), “Not the intense moment isolated, with no before and
after, but a lifetime burning in every moment.” And a few lines later, “We must
be still, and still moving into another intensity.” This is the same conclusion
that every great mystic has ever reached, I think. There’s a Buddhist saying
that you don’t have to climb to the top of the mountain to reach enlightenment.
You can do it from home. And Eliot and Rilke and Wilson and T. Mac all arrive
at the same conclusion. The time is now. The place is here, right where we
stand. “To have been at one with the earth, seems beyond undoing,” wrote Rilke.
“And so we keep pressing on, trying to achieve it, trying to hold it firmly in
our simple hands, in our overcrowded gaze, in our speechless heart.” Rilke
knows, though, that it’s not out there
waiting for us to find it; it’s in here waiting
for us to look at it. “And we, who have always thought of happiness as rising, would feel the emotion that
almost overwhelms us whenever a happy thing falls.”
i like the title "breathing space"
ReplyDeleteokay, so the place exists outside of time. it also must, for us humans, exist here. how, then, to be outside of time and here?
i read the elegies not as working out how to be more like the angels but how to be more human here and now.
and are we seeing that moment, that breathing space, or are we creating it? i think the elegies are about creating it.
this leads me to think that the shabby equipment that is language isn't shabby because it can't describe what we experienced in another realm but shabby as a tool to create that nunc stans. but it's the tool we have and poets make it less and less shabby even as they complain about it.
good work here, heartfelt and intelligent.