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النص الكامل
The rejection of abstract nouns in poetry is old and wide-spread; the occurrence of abstract nouns in poems has at times been common, and never completely disappears, probably never could. There seems to be a question here: does poetic practice contradict poetic theory? If so, which should we trust?
We can begin from what must be the most famous of all statements against abstraction:
A poem should be palpable and mute
As a globed fruit,
Dumb
As old medallions to the thumb,
Silent as the sleeve-worn stone
Of casement ledges where the moss has grown-
A poem should be wordless
As the flight of birds. 1
The basic paradox of MacLeish's poem need not worry us. The claim that a poem should be "equal to, not true," is meant to be true, so that the claim must itself belong to criticism not to poetry, yet MacLeish has written it in a poem. Asserting that poems should not make the assertions that this poem makes gives it the status of a palinode, and like all palinodes it is parasitic on what it rejects (poetry of human love rejecting human for divine love is the most famous but certainly not the only kind of palinode). Like all palinodes, too, it can in theory be written only once (having rejected something how can you go on doing it?) and in practice only a few times. This single act of self-contradiction seems to provide the perfect form for a palinode. 2
The paradox involved in claiming (in words) that a poem should be dumb, should be wordless, is easily explained if we think of "wordless" as the opposite of "wordy." Certain verbal functions cause us to attach the term "words" to them more than to others: when Marlow reads Kurtz's report to the Society for the Suppression of Savage Customs, and remarks of the peroration that it was "magnificent, though difficult to remember, you know," that it gave him "the notion of an exotic immensity ruled by an august Benevolence," he describes it as showing "the unbounded power of eloquence-of words." 3 That this down-to-earth comment is also in words does not invalidate Conrad's point, since Marlow is not a victim of the power of words to obscure reality...