“There
is no thinker who is so unmistakably thinking about things and not being misled
by the indirect influence of words…Here he differs sharply, for instance, from
Saint Augustine, who was, among other things, a wit. He was also a sort of
prose poet, with a power over words in their atmospheric and emotional aspect;
so that his books abound with beautiful passages that rise in the memory like
strains of music; the illi in vos
saeviant; or the unforgettable cry, `Late I have loved thee, O Ancient
Beauty!’”
For
these reasons, among others, Augustine’s Confessions
will always have more readers than Aquinas’ Summa.
The former is a life; the latter, a manual, dense with reasoning. Chesterton
continues:
“It
is true that there is little or nothing of this kind in Saint Thomas; but if he
was without the higher uses of the mere magic of words, he was also free from
that abuse of it, by mere sentimentalists or self-centred artists, which can
become merely morbid and a very black magic indeed. And truly it is by some
such comparison with the purely introspective intellectual that we may find a
hint about the real nature of the thing I describe, or rather fail to describe;
I mean the elemental and primitive poetry that shines through all his thoughts.”
Readers
and writers alike are blind to the “elemental and primitive poetry” of rigorous
prose, with its attentiveness to the real. But it is a species of poetry, as is any disciplined deployment of
language. Take a look at a well-written field guide or Lincoln’s second inaugural address. Explaining why he chose to begin writing in French, Samuel Beckett
is supposed to have said of English: “You couldn’t help writing poetry in it.” English
tempted him into self-indulgent virtuosity, as in his early books, More Pricks Than Kicks and Murphy. French helped curb his
virtuosity. The monolingual among us must rely on humbler disciplines.
3 comments:
Aquinas's great hymn Pange Lingua forms part of many Holy Thursday services--not always in Latin, to be sure. It repays a close look, which will show that he was aware of the "magic of words", but putting them to use in a hymn that is closely reasoned theologically.
Lovely post. And great to have a link to Lincoln's speech.
Thanks for posting.
I just read Chesterton's book on Aquinas last month, and found it curious. The writer, not his topic, is very much front and center in the book, and to what I found an annoying degree. It had the feel of a finger wagging lecture, and that's not what I was used to with Chesterton.
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