| It is well for something to be known. | |
| The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known |
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| NUMBER 1319.—July 15, 1998 |
ISSN0882-3731
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Keenness and Being Affected
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Dear Unknown Friends: We are serializing a 1949 lecture by Eli Siegel of tremendous importance in the understanding of art and the mind of everyone: Poetry and Keenness. And we print here too part of a paper that Aesthetic Realism consultant Dale Laurin, an architect, presented this April at an Aesthetic Realism public seminar titled "What Makes a Man Truly Strong?" Aesthetic Realism is based on this great principle, stated by Mr. Siegel: "All beauty is a making one of opposites, and the making one of opposites is what we are going after in ourselves." Opposites that war in people — without their seeing or understanding this war — are the self asserting itself and the self being affected. I am grateful to comment now on a big aspect of that war: the feeling that to be keen is not only different from being affected, stirred, moved — but that in order to be keen about things we should not let them affect us very much. Aesthetic Realism is the knowledge that shows the complete incorrectness of this feeling! Everyone wants to be keen. And in his lecture Mr. Siegel explains — with richness and clearness and subtlety and power — what keenness is. It is always a cutting through the surface of things, a getting at what they really are. However, the notion of keenness people walk around with has been made corrupt by that force in us which tends to corrupt everything — by that which Mr. Siegel so greatly identified as the source of all injustice: contempt, the "disposition in every person to think he will be for himself by making less of the outside world." To be keen is, of course, not to be taken in. But people don’t know they have a desire to see the world as something tricky, repulsive, out to hurt them — so they can feel that they’re superior to everything and that the only thing they should care for is their precious self. This desire, a phase of contempt, has men, women, and children feel that anything looking good must be a phony, and they in their keenness won’t be taken in by being deeply affected. People’s contempt has them feel day after day that to be unmoved is to be keen: that for things and people to affect you is for them to have power over you, tell you what to do, and if you’re keen you won’t permit that but be unmoved by them and manage them. Meanwhile, people despise themselves for feeling cold. They are pained by an emptiness within, a sense that life is dull, an inability to love someone. But they don’t see that this emptiness, dullness, inability really arise from what they’ve taken to be their "keenness": the self-monition, "Be cool to things; know that they’re mean and fake and you’re too good for them." Aesthetic Realism magnificently shows that while people can go on the deep assumption that this contempt is the keenest thing in the world, it is really the stupidest. Mr. Siegel showed that the deepest desire we have is to like the world through knowing it. It is through being affected by things accurately, through seeing what they are, that we are able to be larger — become ourselves. The Stupidity of ContemptKeenness and John Gibson LockhartA critic, Mr. Siegel has explained, "makes a good thing look good, a bad thing look bad, and a middling thing look middling." Lockhart was so sharp and stinging a critic that he was called "The Scorpion." Yet in various instances — one monumental — he was quite wrong. It is generally agreed now that he is the author of the 1818 review of John Keats’s Endymion in Blackwood’s Magazine. And we have in that influential review a kind of brilliance and keenness which was the same as a vast inability to feel and see the value of Keats. Lockhart was the son-in-law of Sir Walter Scott, and his 1837 Life of Scott has been called the greatest biography in English after Boswell’s Johnson. He was impelled there by a powerful desire both to be exact and to be affected deeply. He wrote on German literature, and he translated, with feeling, old Spanish ballads into English. Yet, as the 5th edition (1985) of The Oxford Companion to English Literature tells it, "In 1817 he began [in Blackwood’s] a long series of attacks on, in particular, Leigh Hunt, Keats, and Hazlitt, castigating them as the low-born ‘Cockney School of Poetry.’" The attacks included Keats’s Poems of 1817; then in 1818 Lockhart reviewed Endymion. Here are some of the sarcastic, clever, oh-so-keen sentences from that review. (The "malady" Lockhart refers to is Keats’s feeling he could write poetry.)
This was written by a person enamored of how "keen" he could be. But because Lockhart couldn’t be affected, couldn’t see value where value existed, yet felt that to sneer was astute, he wasn’t keen but ugly and ridiculous. The fight
in Lockhart is a fight in everyone: between the keenness of wanting to
see and feel the meaning of things, and that contemptuous "keenness" which
is really retardation and disability. Because Eli Siegel’s purpose was
always to see truly, he was the keenest, kindest, most accurate critic
— of both art and life in all their fulness. This keen, deep, alive seeing
is immortal in Aesthetic Realism. But it was there, day after day, in the
sentences he, as person, spoke — the most beautiful thing I know in the
world. The resentment of his greatness by persons of the press and others
— their anger that they couldn’t feel superior to Aesthetic Realism and
are so enormously affected by it—is both infinitely mean and infinitely
stupid. It is through Aesthetic Realism that humanity will have the real
keenness we long for, about our own lives and the world!
— Ellen Reiss, Class
Chairman of Aesthetic Realism
Beyond Surface By Eli Siegel A poem which expresses distrust and is a keen poem is by Shakespeare, from As You Like It. It says, Don’t trust anybody, man or woman. And it gets in the wind as keen or sharp, and talks about biting and bitterness — keen words:
There is a passage also having to do with keenness, which many commentators have wondered about, in King Lear. Towards the end of the play, Lear says to his daughter, Let’s get away from all this, and let’s just keep on looking and seeing beyond what is seen most often: let us be keen. It is a strange passage. It shows the desire of people to see into the heart of things without their own hearts being known — which is a bad kind of keenness, because keenness should always be desired as reciprocal. Lear is talking to Cordelia:
The general idea in this passage is: Let’s spend our time looking into the world so sharply and knowing it so deeply that we don’t have to go through all this; by keen perception we can avoid difficulty — by keen perception with ourselves untouched—and we become God’s spies.
True Strength in a Man
I am grateful to have learned from Aesthetic Realism that the ability to affect and be affected accurately, deeply by the world and people is what makes a man truly strong. But there is another notion of strength men often go by. "To feel," Ellen Reiss writes in TRO 1019, "that others are less than we; that we can be impervious to anyone or anything and laugh off anybody; that we can mold facts and persons to suit ourselves — people take to be strength. But this contempt, Mr. Siegel showed, is the massive weakener of humanity and every individual." As a boy, it was through art that I was most deeply affected by reality, and expressed myself through it in a way that made me happy and proud. For five years I attended classes — first in drawing, then painting, design, and sculpture — at the local art museum. They took place each Saturday morning — the one morning my mother didn’t have to coax me out of bed; I bounded out! One of the assignments I loved doing was an in-depth study of a fruit or vegetable. I chose the pepper, and for weeks studied peppers inside and out: the smooth hills and valleys of their outer skin; the firm yet translucent inner flesh; the cave-like chambers containing seeds and space. I tried to give form, through charcoal, paint, and clay, not only to their appearance, but their texture, aroma, even their taste. Through wanting to be affected, I was able to have an effect — to get to new, deeper expression — that made me strong. But I also had the other notion of strength. Though I acted shy, inside I felt I was better than all my classmates, and my parents. I regret to this day how ashamed I was of my parents on the occasion when I received a scholarship to continue my art studies in a pre-college program at a nearby university. They had supported my studies and my father had driven me to and from class every week; yet I — cheaply and ungratefully — felt so embarrassed by what I saw as their cultural inferiority that I didn’t even introduce them to my teacher. In my puffed-up self-importance, I felt cowardly, not strong. I felt more and more separate, immune to the feelings and full reality of others. "How do you see affecting and being affected?" Eli Siegel so kindly asked me in an Aesthetic Realism lesson I was honored to have in 1978. I said, "I think too much I’ve wanted to affect and not be affected." And I learned that when we don’t want to be affected truly, we can’t affect another truly either. Mr. Siegel asked me a question that is now the source of my largest happiness and gratitude: "Can you be deeply affected by a person and stronger?" "Yes," I said. "And you’re looking for that in the woman I mentioned?" The woman was Barbara Buehler, a city planner and Aesthetic Realism consultant-in-training, whom I had begun to date. Yes, this was what I was looking for; and I found it! I love Barbara’s keen mind and passionate desire that the people of America be seen respectfully and live in decent homes. What I have learned from and about her in our happy marriage of nearly 18 years makes me stronger! I love Aesthetic
Realism for showing that true strength comes from wanting to know and be
fair to the world and people. It is because he had this purpose always
that Eli Siegel and the education he founded are unparalleled in their
kindness, beauty, and ethical might.
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