Syamantakshobhan Basu,
PG I,
Roll No-48.
Course: Milton
PG I,
Roll No-48.
Course: Milton
The Chaos of Silence:
Contrast and Death in the Soundscapes of L'Allegro and Il
Penseroso
"There
let the pealing organ blow
To
the full voiced choir below,
In
service high, and anthems clear,
As
may with sweetness, through mine ear,
Dissolve
me into ecstasies"
Written
possibly in 1631-32, which was the last year of his academic study at
Cambridge, Milton's paired poems, L'Allegro and Il
Penseroso displayed a degree of maturity and formal mastery that
became definitive of his poetic endeavours. Here, I would like to
show how Milton, himself musically adept and the son of a minor
composer of the times, used aural imagery to construct soundscapes,
and the contrasting attitudes of these two soundscapes towards sound,
silence, and death.
Barbara
Lewalski, in her critical biography of John Milton, notes that
Charles Diodati and Milton himself exchanged letters in Greek, where
each saw both himself and the other as a poet and scholar of
contrasting character, much like the respective narrators of
L'Allegro and Il Penseroso. However, suggestions of
homoeroticism and a mutual, warm affection between the two show that
these two natures are not necessarily entirely opposed to each other.
The positive aspects of each affective nature are drawn to the
opposite.
"Each
regards himself and his friend as poet and scholar, but Diodati is
cast by both as a merry, carefree, pleasure-loving extrovert (like
l’Allegro), and Milton as a sober, bookish recluse (like il
Penseroso). Their exchanges are filled with warm affection, intimacy
of spirit, and eager anticipations of reunions, with some overtones
of homoeroticism – most likely unacknowledged as such by either
one."
This
contrast is employed in the twin poems, L'Allegro
and Il Penseroso through a number of poetic metaphors. In
particular, the construction of the "tone" of both poems,
and the contrast between the two, can be best studied through one
particular device. The use of sound imagery to layer the poetic
conceit is Milton's stroke of genius. Milton's use of sound imagery
is characteristic of his poetry, and foreshadows a greater reliance
on sound to convey meaning, in the absence of his own physical vision
on the part of Milton in his later works, such as Samson
Agonistes. The two soundscapes
reflect the affective mood that each poem seems to assume. As
a testament to Milton's
control over the formal,
each poem seems to slip on the garb of the affect that the title
purports to represent, and this is indicated right away in the first
declaration, where the Muse which controls the opposite affect is
banished from the poem's metaphorical landscape. Therefore L'Allegro
begins by saying- "Hence loathed Melancholy"
while Il Penseroso
banishes blind optimism by stating in its very first line- "Hence
vain deluding joys". To
quote Rosemund Tuve-"Each
poem begins with a banishing of the travesty of what is praised in
the other."
There
are two kinds of each affective emotion expression in the poems.
There is a 'good' Melancholy and a 'bad' Melancholy just as there is
a 'good' Joy and a 'bad' Joy. And it is the 'bad' kinds that the
narrators seek to exorcise in each poem. This sets up an internal
contrast as well as an external contrast. Within Joy itself there is
a splicing, just as Melancholy too, finds itself divided. And in a
way, the 'good' kinds of each affective emotion bear a sympathy
towards each other, much as Diodati and Milton do. Excesses of each
emotion, as of a dominant humour, would lead to harm. Thus brooding,
bilious 'bad' Melancholy resembles Satan in the darkness, jealously
spreading his wings to cover in shadow the young man's soul. Thus
also, "vain deluding Joys" are derided as "the
brood of folly without father bred". Both excesses are
marked by a lack of legitimacy as well as of value. Therefore it is
not Melancholy contending with Joy, not L'Allegro with Il
Penseroso. It is rather Melancholy contending with itself, Joy
with meaningless Joy . The two affective moods are thus of two
complementary and not entirely contrasting characters. The contast
lies in the attitude that each takes towards the world surrounding
it. Most importantly, in the attitude of both towards death.
Before
studying the relationship of
the two poems to death,
I intend to establish the poetic
and affective value of the soundscape of each poem, with respect to
each other. The two poems
hinge upon the contrast that is played out between their soundscapes,
through these metaphors, and the common thread weaving the two can be
found in Milton's use of sound imagery as the substantiation of his
poetic vision.
Although
Milton's writing dates to the
17th
Century, like most other Early Modern works
or works immediately following the Renaissance,
it also constitutes a
continuity with what is termed the "Middle Ages".
Interesting to note then,
what Johan H. Huizinga has to say about the contrasting values of
sound in the Medieval period, still not entirely irrelevant in
Milton's time:
"All things presenting themselves to the mind in violent contrasts and impressive forms, lent a tone of excitement and of passion to everyday life and tended to produce that perpetual oscillation between despair and distracted joy, between cruelty and pious tenderness which characterize life in the Middle Ages.
"All things presenting themselves to the mind in violent contrasts and impressive forms, lent a tone of excitement and of passion to everyday life and tended to produce that perpetual oscillation between despair and distracted joy, between cruelty and pious tenderness which characterize life in the Middle Ages.
One
sound rose ceaselessly above the noises of busy life and lifted all
things unto a sphere of order and serenity: the sound of bells. The
bells were in daily life like good spirits, which by their familiar
voices, now called upon the citizens to mourn and now to rejoice, now
warned them of danger, now exhorted them to piety. They were known by
their names: big Jacqueline, or the bell Roland. Every one knew the
difference in meaning of .the various ways of ringing. However
continuous the ringing of the bells, people would seem not to have
become blunted to the effect of their sound.
Throughout the famous judicial duel between two citizens of
Valenciennes, in 1455, the big bell, 'which is hideous to hear', says
Chastellain, never stopped ringing. What intoxication the pealing of
the bells of all the churches, and of all the monasteries of Paris,
must have produced, sounding from morning till evening, and even
during the night, when a peace was concluded or a pope elected."
In fact, in L'Allegro the "merry bells ring round" in joyous celebration of night "till the livelong daylight fail", while at the end of Il Penseroso the "pealing" organ blows down to a "full voiced choir below", which in "service high, and anthems clear, As may with sweetness" through the narrator's ear dissolve him "into ecstasies". The heavenly organ functions like a pealing bell, drawing the narrator, world-weary and wiser than his L'Allegro counterpart, to the "dim religious light" , and its grave summons eventually grows to such a crescendo that it dissolves him into ecstasies. This religious rapture, this complete surrender to the call of the grave heavenly sound as something deeper than any earthly joy, takes precedence over all other sounds in the two poems. I contend that it represents the highest pitch of rapture,where poetic grace spills over into religious grace, and is only achievable in the mature stages of Il Penseroso. I believe that these lines display the privilege of Il Penseroso over L'Allegro, a point that I will further develop when talking of death in relation to the two.
Milton's own approach to sound as something preternatural, something
indicative of deeper strains, foreshadows Samson's blindness and his
own. The Bachhic singer in L'Allegro hears more than he sees,
as if soon enough he will be forced to hear the sounds of revelry
rather than see the acts. Of course, Milton cannot know his later
blindness, and this only highlights a natural inclination to aural
imagery. In Il Penseroso, right at the close of the cycle the
two poems represent, the narratorial voice says-
"Till old experience do attain
To something like prophetic strain."
"Till old experience do attain
To something like prophetic strain."
The cycle, through revelry and celebration of life, tends to final
wisdom.
The two poems are experiments in genre, literary style and
intertextuality. The complementarity plays out as contrasts which are
predominantly formal in nature. With respect to the formal
differentiations distinguishing as well as tying the two poems
together, it may be instructive to look at how Handel interpreted and
substantiated the two texts through musical language. The "sense"
of the two poems, in terms of their affective sense, is expressed
through the formal distinctions that Handel made in setting the two
to music.
"The "sense" of the work emerges predominantly in
the contrasts of various sorts that appear between l'Allergo and il
Penseroso "movements", the groupings of recitatives, airs
and choruses that are taken from one or the other of the companion
poems. Handel was clearly concerned to distinguish the two states of
mind by establishing differing attitudes towards melody and harmony.
Something of what will be his method of portraying the contrast
appears in the opening exchange between the two. The work is unique
among Handel's large-scale vocal compositions in its lack of the
tradtional orchestral overture. The opening pair of recitatives and
airs serve in effect as an overture for what is to follow: each state
of mind is introduced, and their opposing characters are
established."
Michael O'Connell and John Powell go on to claim that "In
this overture-like exchange, Handel portrays musically what Rosemund
Tuve has judged occurs in the opening lines of Milton's poems".
The musical contrast therefore is between "not the opposing
state of mind itself, but what it might be mistaken for."
Death, as in much of Milton's work, plays a role in the orientation
of the poems' affective states or moods. In Phillipe Aries' Western
Attitudes Towards Death, a clear line of descent is traced in
attitudes towards death and burial in Western civilization, running
concurrently with major social phenomena such as the Christianization
of Pagan religious and social customs. Referring to the artes
moriendi tradition of iconography in texts and woodcuts,
primarily in the 15th and 16th centuries, Aries
says-"The iconography of the artes moriendi joins in a
single scene the security of collective rite and the anxiety of a
personal interrogation." Aries describes these two centuries
as a turning point in the attitude towards death, where the calm,
unresisting, even welcoming belief in the universality of death is
increasingly replaced by an anxiety of the loss of loved ones and
anxiety of the death of self. Death becomes, as time progresses,
something to be feared, and the excessive, ritualistic mourning of
earlier times is gradually replaced by a silence, an aversion to even
the mention of death. A frantic desire to remove onself from the very
thought of encountering death, intensified in the aftermath of the
First World War.
Aries further says that the attitude of spiritual writers in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries shows a struggle against the
prevailing belief that a virtuous life was unnecessary, because a
good death redeemed one entirely. However, they continued to hold
that the moral conditions and circumstances of death had still a
vital importance. Milton, therefore, occupies a time that is situated
in a flux between two opposing, contrasting attitudes towards death.
One of calm acceptance, and even a welcoming, of the importance of
death as superseding that of life, and the other of a raucous
resistance, a turning away, an exorcism of death and all of its
friends. I believe that the unstated attitudes of each poem towards
death, also consitute a basis for the contrast between them. In
keeping with my study of sound imagery in both poems, I will
illustrate my position through the use of mostly aural metaphors.
In L'Allegro, darkness and sorrow are juxtaposed constantly
with bright, joyous sounds in an attempt to banish the melancholy of
final and irrevocable death. Therefore "the cock, with lively
din,/Scatters the rear of darkness thin". There is thus
"dancing in the checkered shade", but only "till
the livelong daylight fail". Yet, these are futile attempts.
Attempts that keep darkness and death at bay, but with their shadow
peeping stealthily over youthful shoulders. So,while "the
milkmaid singeth blithe", the "mower whets his
scythe". This is, in effect an extremely common memento
mori, although the mower here is not ostensibly death himself.
This subtle effect of a quietening, a lulling of all sound by sleep
and death is repeated often in the poem. At the end of a day's hectic
activity, the pastoral inhabitants of L'Allegro are described
as such-"Thus done the tales, to bed they creep,/ By
whispering winds soon lulled asleep." The strains of "soft
Lydian airs, married to immortal verse", could have,
according to narrator "won the ear/Of Pluto to have quite set
free/His half-regained Eurydice". Yet Orpheus himself had
turned back to see the face of death. And the bard of the paradise of
L'Allegro, like all other bards, is fated to do the same. The
joy of living is fleeting, temporary, always an interlude for death's
final trumpet sound. Somewhere, therefore, the joyous hope in
L'Allegro, of everlasting Spring and revelry seems to ring
hollow, in the face of unremitted, irrevocable death, although the
defiance of it till the final hour in itself is a tremendous act of
bravery, and produces some of the sweetest music to be heard in
Heaven or earth, such as Shakespeare's "native wood-notes
wild". The music of L'Allegro is the music of life,
to be silenced soon by the grim knell, but for all that, none the
less beautiful.
Il Penseroso on the other hand, is predisposed to a quiet,
meditative melancholy, that bears no conflict with darkness or death.
There is a welcoming of dark spaces, an active seeking out of
seclusion, a proclivity towards calming sounds, and ultimately of
heavenly silence. The narrator's desire is to "join with thee
calm peace, and quiet" and to this end, the Muse of the
poem must bring with it "the mute silence hist along,/ Less
Philomel will deign a song/In her sweetest, saddest plight,/Smoothing
the rugged brow of night". The Nightingale is a "Sweet
bird that shunn'st the noise of folly,/ Most musical,
most melancholy!/ Thee, chantress, oft the woods among,/I woo to hear
thy even song". In the peaceful heart of the Sylvan gardens
of Il Penseroso-"the rude ax, with heaved stroke,/ Was
never heard the nymphs to daunt/Or fright them from their hallowed
haunt". And yet, while Orpheus' song of laughter had failed
to win back his Eurydice in L'Allegro, the "Sad
Virgin" of Il Penseroso has the power to "raise
Musaeus from his bower,/ Or bid the soul of Orpheus sing/ Such notes
as, warbled to the string, /Drew iron tears down Pluto's cheek/ And
made Hell grant what love did seek". It is the strength of
melancholy that forces even death into submission. And yet,
melancholy, in its innate sympathy with death itself, does in silence
the work of death. Thus, "the cricket on the hearth,/ Or the
bellman's drowsy charm " reminds us of Shakespeare's fatal
bellman, who pretended to guard the gates of Hell. The affective
sympathy with death is more direct, and less conflicting than in
L'Allegro. The scholar in his lonely tower lives a life of
silent, quiet, meditation, and when the "pealing organ"
of heaven dissolves him "into ecstasies", it is a
welcome dissolution, a dissolution long-awaited and prepared for.
Death calls him and he goes, without complaint, because the life of
meditation and silence has brought him to "old experience"
which attains to "something like prophetic strain".
L'Allegro, if I may make the comparison, rises chaotically
like Pandemonium,from the base state of Il Penseroso, which is
the first, stunned acceptance of their Fall by the Angels. It is also
the state to which the Angels must return, when Hell is shut up by
God on the Day of Judgement. All struggle against death is futility
embodied, yet human endeavour exists in these spaces of dissent, in
this dogged refusal to acknowledge the finality of death. It is for
this that man makes furious, joyous, living music. This music, as in
L'Allegro is projected as a state of harmonious perfection,
yet in its shadow lurks the "barbarous dissonance" that
threatens to dislodge the narrator from his pastoral paradise.
Furthermore, like all excited states, the energy must give out, to be
replaced by the silence of meditation, silence, and finally death.The
melancholy is a quiet embodiment of the death-wish that is common to
all mankind. The joy of life is the joy in L'Allegro. The
peace of the tomb is the peace in Il Penseroso.
Therefore, through an interweaving network of aural imagery, Milton
structures L'Allegro and Il Penseroso to stand in a
position of complementarity to each other, and yet each bears a
sharply contrasting attitude towards chaos and death. Read together
with his later works, particularly Comus,where the Bacchic revelers may only be heard, Paradise Lost, and Samson Agonistes, where the blind Samson must stretch out
towards all meaning through sound alone, a pattern emerges. A pattern that shows an
increasing engagement with sound imagery, and an increasingly nuanced
position towards death.
Bibliography:
The following works were referred to in the composition of this
paper:
1. Milton, John. The Annotated Milton. Edited by Burton
Raffel. New York: Bantam Classics.
2. Lewalski, Barbara K. The Life of John Milton: A Critical
Biography. Massachusetts: Blackwell,2003.
3. Aries, Philippe. Western Attitudes Toward Death: From the
Middle Ages to the Present. Translated by Patricia M. Ranum. London:
Marion Boyars, 1976.
4. Huizinga, Johan H. The Waning of the Middle Ages.
Translated by F. Hopman. London: Penguin,1987.
5. Tuve, Rosamund. Images and Themes in Five Poems by Milton.
Harvard: Harvard University Press, 1957.
6. O'Connell, Michael and Powell, John. "Music and Sense in
Handel's Setting of L'Allegro and Il Penseroso".
Eighteenth-Century Studies 12, no.1(1978).