ARTICLE

The Fire of Life

by Richard Rorty

In an essay called "Pragmatism and Romanticism" I tried to restate the argument of Shelley's "Defense of Poetry." At the heart of Romanticism, I said, was the claim that reason can only follow paths that the imagination has first broken. No words, no reasoning. No imagination, no new words. No such words, no moral or intellectual progress.

I ended that essay by contrasting the poet's ability to give us a richer language with the philosopher's attempt to acquire non-linguistic access to the really real. Plato's dream of such access was itself a great poetic achievement. But by Shelley's time, I argued, it had been dreamt out. We are now more able than Plato was to acknowledge our finitude — to admit that we shall never be in touch with something greater than ourselves. We hope instead that human life here on earth will become richer as the centuries go by because the language used by our remote descendants will have more resources than ours did. Our vocabulary will stand to theirs as that of our primitive ancestors stands to ours.

In that essay, as in previous writings, I used "poetry" in an extended sense. I stretched Harold Bloom's term "strong poet" to cover prose writers who had invented new language games for us to play — people like Plato, Newton, Marx, Darwin, and Freud as well as versifiers like Milton and Blake. These games might involve mathematical equations, or inductive arguments, or dramatic narratives, or (in the case of the versifiers) prosodic innovation. But the distinction between prose and verse was irrelevant to my philosophical purposes.

Shortly after finishing "Pragmatism and Romanticism," I was diagnosed with inoperable pancreatic cancer. Some months after I learned the bad news, I was sitting around having coffee with my elder son and a visiting cousin. My cousin (who is a Baptist minister) asked me whether I had found my thoughts turning toward religious topics, and I said no. "Well, what about philosophy?" my son asked. "No," I replied, neither the philosophy I had written nor that which I had read seemed to have any particular bearing on my situation. I had no quarrel with Epicurus's argument that it is irrational to fear death, nor with Heidegger's suggestion that ontotheology originates in an attempt to evade our mortality. But neither ataraxia (freedom from disturbance) nor Sein zum Tode (being toward death) seemed in point.

"Hasn't anything you've read been of any use?" my son persisted. "Yes," I found myself blurting out, "poetry." "Which poems?" he asked. I quoted two old chestnuts that I had recently dredged up from memory and been oddly cheered by, the most quoted lines of Swinburne's "Garden of  Proserpine":

We thank with brief thanksgiving
Whatever gods may be
That no life lives for ever;
That dead men rise up never;
That even the weariest river
Winds somewhere safe to sea.


and Landor's "On His Seventy-Fifth Birthday":

Nature I loved, and next to Nature, Art;
I warmed both hands before the fire of life,
It sinks, and I am ready to depart.


I found comfort in those slow meanders and those stuttering embers. I suspect that no comparable effect could have been produced by prose. Not just imagery, but also rhyme and rhythm were needed to do the job. In lines such as these, all three conspire to produce a degree of compression, and thus of  impact, that only verse can achieve. Compared to the shaped charges contrived by versifiers, even the best prose is scattershot.

Though various bits of verse have meant a great deal to me at particular moments in my life, I have never been able to write any myself (except for scribbling sonnets during dull faculty meetings — a form of  doodling). Nor do I keep up with the work of contemporary poets. When I do read verse, it is mostly favorites from adolescence. I suspect that my ambivalent relation to poetry, in this narrower sense, is a result of Oedipal complications produced by having had a poet for a father. (See James Rorty, Children of the Sun (Macmillan, 1926).)

However that may be, I now wish that I had spent somewhat more of my life with verse. This is not because I fear having missed out on truths that are incapable of statement in prose. There are no such truths; there is nothing about death that Swinburne and Landor knew but Epicurus and Heidegger failed to grasp. Rather, it is because I would have lived more fully if I had been able to rattle off more old chestnuts — just as I would have if I had made more close friends. Cultures with richer vocabularies are more fully human — farther removed from the beasts — than those with poorer ones; individual men and women are more fully human when their memories are amply stocked with verses.

COMMENTS (7)

On April 24, 2008 at 10:30 am wrote:
this poetry is beautiful how i bless god for his greatness to create such beautiful words

On November 6, 2008 at 8:29 am Gangleri wrote:
Good old Rorty even in his last writings still babbling about dictionaries and innovative language games as if discovering something innovative and leaving a trace is the meaning that drives us to write poetry or to rummage in mathematics ... not the joy of a sentiment becoming a definite thought and taking a form.

But still I love him . Peace to his spirit.

On February 4, 2009 at 10:55 am Islahudin qureshi wrote:
Hi i m from pak i bileve the fire of life in the secrate of world i search that insha ullah i found that r u know about that its real

On April 5, 2009 at 10:53 pm flores wrote:
...like Rorty said ... imagination and words will give us humanity ...

On July 12, 2009 at 9:38 am Kushajata wrote:
Thank you Prof Rorty. I am only 60, I could
possibly take the hint and delve into Landor
and Swinburne while there is still time left.
But I have a question to you. Would you
give higher priority to verse? You wish that
you had spent somewhat more of your life
with verse. Assuming time was limited (I
am sure it was) would you rather spend it
on verse, or on your philosophic quest?
Would you, with the privilege of hindsight,
read poetry, socialized and made friends
AT THE EXPENSE OF PHILOSOPHY?

On July 20, 2009 at 3:00 am Pan wrote:
Isn't it clear from any of Rorty's later
writings (after and including
Contingency Irony and Solidarity) that
he abandons hope in the search for
philosophic truth as perceived by the
20th century Anglo-American academy
en masse, instead picking up hope for
human truth, as perceived by people in
love, people facing difficulty, people on
the verge of a significant breakthrough,
and so on?

Rorty may have been a wonderful
philosopher, but he was foremost a
man who experienced the richness of
life's delicacies and wonder/ful
experiences. He would no doubt not
disagree with that judgment.

In proceeding after his death, may we
take a word of his advice, and focus not
on problems of philosophers, but rather
on problems of human beings.

On November 7, 2009 at 2:50 pm Richard wrote:
"...may we focus not on problems of
philosophers, but rather on problems of
human beings." - beautifully said.

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This essay originally appeared in the November 2007 issue of Poetry.



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About the Author

 Richard  Rorty

Richard Rorty (1931-2007) was an American philosopher best known for revitalizing the school of American pragmatism. He served as a professor emeritus of comparative literature at Stanford and was the author of several books, including Philosophy . . .
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