Sunday, June 7, 2020
Narrators Reaction to Erskines Death in The Portrait of Mr. W.H. - Literature Essay Samples
The long, antepenultimate paragraph of ââ¬Å"The Portrait of Mr. W.H.â⬠neatly interrupts the dialogue that has just revealed the true nature of the death of Erskine, a friend of the narrator. The narrator is taking in the shocking news that Erskine had died naturally of consumption and not by suicide, as a letter from Erskine himself had previously led the narrator to believe. Then, in considering the odd circumstances surrounding his friendââ¬â¢s recent demise, the narrator asks himself why Erskine in his tragic egress ââ¬Å"turned back to tell [him] what was not trueâ⬠(100). The paragraph continues with the narrator musing on the meaning of his friendââ¬â¢s dying untruth, ultimately in an attempt to convince himself of its ââ¬Å"very uselessnessâ⬠(100) in converting him back to the theory of Willie Hughes. However, latent in the language he uses to dismiss and devalue Erskineââ¬â¢s letter lays that exact capacity for reconversion that the narrator expl icitly denies. He is almost desperately persuading himself that he has lost faith in the theory. He wants to believe that he had at that same moment in which his faith left him, experienced a fundamental change in his character and sensibility that prevents him from being affected by Erskineââ¬â¢s pose of martyrdom. He assures himself that Erskineââ¬â¢s act was futile and that he is firm in his unbelief, but in assuring himself, his very deliberate language rife with ambiguity, deception, and misrepresentation seems to suggest that Erskineââ¬â¢s pose is slowly instilling in the narrator a nervously revived belief.The narrator, stepping away from the doctor who just informed him of the suicidal nature of Erskineââ¬â¢s death, immediately asks himself a litany of questions, pondering the motive for his friendââ¬â¢s lie. Characteristic of Wildean narration, he paraphrases and misappropriates a literary source. He alludes to a passage of indirect speech from Les Misà ©rab les, generalizing it and attributing it to Hugo himself. By first posing the question ââ¬Å"was Hugo right?â⬠the narrator asserts a rhetorical mode and, given Hugoââ¬â¢s respected and well-known place in literary history, there is a preemptive level of external authority lent to the succeeding question: ââ¬Å"is affectation the only thing that accompanies a man up the steps to the scaffoldâ⬠(100)? By posing his citation of Hugo as a question, the narrator wants to be taken on his word that this is an accurate, unloaded representation of Hugoââ¬â¢s own thought. He distracts from the problem of the veracity of the attributed paraphrase and redirects attention to the veracity of the formulated question. However, on closer inspection, it seems to be a paraphrasing of convenient misremembering or, more likely, of calculated misrepresentation. In Hugoââ¬â¢s novel a Bishop goes up the scaffold with a condemned man. The narrator in Les Mis, who probably most nearly ap proximates Hugo, actually calls the act ââ¬Å"sublimeâ⬠and misunderstood (326). It is only some of the ââ¬Å"people in the town who said it was all affectationâ⬠(326). Wildeââ¬â¢s narrator reorganizes the passage, eliminates the sublimity, attributes the misunderstanding of the townspeople to Hugo himself, and ultimately presents a misleading paraphrase to characterize Erskineââ¬â¢s action. As a result, he reveals his actively depreciative and misleading tendencies that set the tone for his subsequent musings. Nevertheless, he does so in the form of questions that demonstrate his palpable doubts and indecision about the thoughts crossing his mind. He compounds that uncertainty with the subliminal connotations of the true, contradictory passage from Hugo that is ineluctably entwined with the paraphrase. So, while he is ostensibly questioning the futile affectation of Erskineââ¬â¢s dying act, he is implicitly suggesting the incompatibly sublime aspect of the act that was Hugoââ¬â¢s real assertion.Wildeââ¬â¢s narrator continues along the same line of thought with one more question: ââ¬Å"Did Erskine merely want to produce a dramatic effectâ⬠(100)? No, the narrator admits, confident in his ability to pigeonhole his friend, ââ¬Å"that was not like himâ⬠(100). In fact, according to the narrator, attempting to produce such an effect was more ââ¬Å"like something I might have doneâ⬠(100). What is initially striking about this sentence is the vagueness inherent in constructing a sentence around a simile with the decidedly vague descriptor ââ¬Å"something.â⬠Yet, it is also notable that the narrator chooses to make this confession in the potential pluperfect tense coupled with ââ¬Ëmight.ââ¬â¢ The use of this tense demonstrates the careful and deliberate break that he is making with his former self, the narrator from the beginning of the story, since he could just as easily have constructed the sentence using the present tense. His use of the verb ââ¬Ëmightââ¬â¢ draws even more attention to his phrasing and, in the process, causes his assertion to seem somewhat suspiciously labored. The ââ¬Ëmightââ¬â¢ creates even further distance by insinuating that even if he was like he used to be, there is still only the possibility of him producing something like such a dramatic effect. He could have used the conditional ââ¬Ëwouldââ¬â¢ in place of ââ¬Ëmightââ¬â¢ and created less of a rift between himself, both past and present, and the hypothetical production of such a dramatic effect.The narrator ââ¬Å"had grown wiser,â⬠though, than he was at the beginning of the text and thatââ¬â¢s why it is only his past, naive self that might possibly do something similar to what Erskine did. Considering his effusive praise and passionate emulation of Cyril Graham for the majority of the text, before he claims to have lost belief in the Willie Hughes theory, he is required to ad mit the possibility of his former self being desirous of creating such an effect. However, it is possibly the fear that Erskineââ¬â¢s dramatic pose at a self-realized departure is affecting his disbelief in the theory that leads the narrator to distance himself self-consciously.Nevertheless, the narrator claims that he does not think that mere dramatic effect was the purpose of his friendââ¬â¢s letter. He claims that Erskine ââ¬Å"was simply actuated by a desire to reconvert [him] to Cyril Grahamââ¬â¢s theoryâ⬠(100). Essentially, the narrator sets up two possible motives for his friendââ¬â¢s letter: to create a dramatic effect or to reconvert him to the theory. He dismisses the former in favor of the latter. But, oddly, he uses synonymous adverbs in both instances. ââ¬Å"Merelyâ⬠and ââ¬Å"simplyâ⬠both provide a plain, stripped-down, almost diminutive description of the two possible motives. This is another conscious move to minimize the significance and influence of Erskineââ¬â¢s letter. However, in juxtaposing the two potential motives as separately uncomplicated and dismissible, either as untrue or ineffective, does that not leave room for the effectiveness of their conflation? This conflation does not enter into the narratorââ¬â¢s thought process and understandably so, as it would, no doubt, force him to admit the effect that Erskineââ¬â¢s letter was having on him, despite his protestations. For isnââ¬â¢t the production of a dramatic effect, in this instance, inextricable from Erskineââ¬â¢s actuation of a desire to reconvert the narrator? Especially given the narratorââ¬â¢s aesthetic sensibilities and his friendââ¬â¢s intimate understanding of his predilections and personality?As the pace continues to build in the narratorââ¬â¢s thoughts, he becomes more blatant in his use of misrepresentation as a means to cope with his unwanted reconversion. He says that Erskine ââ¬Å"thought that if [the narrator] could be made to believe that he had given his life for [the Willie Hughes theory], [he] would be deceived by the pathetic fallacy of martyrdomâ⬠(100). He pretends that his friend thought that he would never find out that he actually died of consumption, which is utterly ridiculous given the fact that Erskine asked his mother to present the narrator with the portrait. Cyril Grahamââ¬â¢s suicidal martyrdom was the impetus of the narratorââ¬â¢s original belief, but it seems as though he may have, in fact, grown wiser or more jaded. But Erskine was aware of this; he was aware that martyrdom is ââ¬Å"merely a tragic form of skepticismâ⬠(100). Therefore, it is not on actual martyrdom that Erskine relies to reconvert the narrator, but the pose at martyrdom, the realization of his ââ¬Å"own personality on some imaginative plane out of the reach of the trammeling accidents and limitations of real lifeâ⬠(33). The narrator continues to harp on martyrdom, though, as if the suicide was not a pose. He claims ââ¬Å"no man dies for what he knows to be trueâ⬠(100). Again, he makes an irrelevant, deceptive point in an attempt to protect his waning disbelief. His assertion is without traction since no one has claimed to know the truth about the theory, rather Erskine believes in it and desires to transfer that belief. In discussing martyrdom the narrator seems to forget that Erskine died naturally, so no one has died for anything. Erskine died by consumption and posed his death as a martyrdom to something he believes in, knowing full well that the fallacy of his pose would be revealed, but confident that his deliberate ââ¬Å"mode of actingâ⬠(33) would, nonetheless, affect his friend, the narrator.The interrupting thoughts of the narrator culminate with a declaration of ââ¬Å"the very uselessness of Erskineââ¬â¢s letterâ⬠(100). This uselessness is exactly what the narrator has been approaching all along; it is exactly what he ha s been using to fight his encroaching reconversion: a confusion of ââ¬Å"an ethical with an aesthetical problemâ⬠(33). For Erskine merely wished to go out as he pleased, trumping the limitations of his fatal disease, approximating the death of his dear friend, Cyril Graham, and providing a last hurrah for a theory he had been reconverted to on his deathbed. Erskine is not a slave and true martyr to the theory, but the emptying ciborium of its legacy.Therefore, the narratorââ¬â¢s declaration of Erskineââ¬â¢s letterââ¬â¢s uselessness is based on the preceding sense he gives that he thinks Erskine thought he would never find out about the true nature of his death. This is decidedly untrue. In stooping to misguided and misleading utilitarian ethics to dismiss Erskineââ¬â¢s letter, the narrator appears to be flailing about in a last ditch effort to assure himself that he has not been infected with belief. However, it is apparent that he is merely trying to avoid admitt ing his subtle reconversion. The subsequent paragraph gets more explicit about the narratorââ¬â¢s reentrance into the cult of Willie Hughes. Erskineââ¬â¢s mother returns and hands him the portrait, that symbol of a faith based on deceit. Then, as regent to the deceased high priest, her son, baptizes the narrator as ââ¬Å"her tears fell on [his] handâ⬠(100). This happens without narrative comment and all of the denials of reconversion seem ridiculous when in the last paragraph, written in the present tense, the narrator looks at the portrait and admits ââ¬Å"there really is a great deal to be said for the Willie Hughes theory of Shakespeareââ¬â¢s sonnetsâ⬠(101). And isnââ¬â¢t he ultimately carrying out the legacy that was given to him, ââ¬Å"stained with the blood of two livesâ⬠(98), by telling the story?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.