Charles Lamb
the Aristotelian. Seeing likenesses among unlike things is, the Greek teaches
in Poetics, “a sign of genius, since a good metaphor implies an
intuitive perception of the similarity in dissimilars.” It also implies the
presence of someone with a lively mind for whom the world is charged with
correspondences. Being literal-minded, seeing only what is there and assuming
that’s the end of it, is a form of blindness and must be awfully dull. Lamb is
writing to Southey on this date, March 15, in 1799. He refers specifically to poems
in Southey’s latest volume and compares them with his earlier work.
Typical of
Lamb is his emphasis on the pleasure of metaphor making: “a rose and a star.” The
unexpectedness brings delight. Think about it further and the comparison becomes
obvious, illuminating flower and celestial body. A good metaphor completes a
circuit. Lamb continues with his off-the-cuff review of Southey’s poems and
then, charmingly, finishes his letter:
“These
remarks, I know, are crude and unwrought; but I do not lay claim to much
accurate thinking. I never judge system-wise of things, but fasten upon
particulars.”
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