They
say a picture is worth a thousand words. Sometimes this is true. A picture comes
in handy when seeking a suspect in a crime. If all they posted on the “Most
Wanted” board at the post office was a thousand words describing the ne’er-do-well,
it would be significantly less likely to be noticed. The concepts of Geometry
would be really difficult to grasp without pictures. There is a reason Ikea
assembly instructions are mainly laid out in pictures.
But,
while it may be true in these cases that a picture is worth a great many words,
it is not merely a matter of bookkeeping (1 picture = 1,000 words). There are
times when only words will do. It is, in fact, mildly ironic that the phrase,
“a picture is worth a thousand words”, gets across a point in seven succinct
words that would be difficult to make with a picture!
Anyone
who has looked through an old family photo album knows the frustration of
turning over a photograph in the hope of finding the subjects of the snapshot
identified, and finding it blank. How then can we make sense of the picture
without the words?
Writing the Picture
A
well written passage in a good work of literature that describes scenery can
convey something more about the place than can be captured in many photographs.
I have never been to Norway, but reading Norwegian author Sigrid Undset’s
novels, set in her native country, has made me long to go to this land where
the breathtaking and dramatic landscape has shaped the history and cultural
character of the people.
Willa
Cather has done the same for Santa Fe, New Mexico in her brilliant work, “Death
Comes for the Archbishop”. If I am ever fortunate enough to visit, I will feel
a familiarity and connection with these places because the authors have invited
me into their love for them.
Santa Fe landscape. Photo by Janelle Ortega |
Poems
too can convey vivid images that a picture could not capture. Take, for
instance, William Wordsworth’s poem, “Daffodils.”
I
wandered lonely as a cloud
That
floats on high o'er vales and hills,
When
all at once I saw a crowd,
A
host, of golden daffodils;
Beside
the lake, beneath the trees,
Fluttering
and dancing in the breeze.
Continuous
as the stars that shine
And
twinkle on the milky way,
They stretched
in never-ending line
Along
the margin of a bay:
Ten
thousand saw I at a glance,
Tossing
their heads in sprightly dance
The
waves beside them danced; but they
Out-did
the sparkling waves in glee:
A
poet could not but be gay,
In
such a jocund company:
I
gazed—and gazed—but little thought
What
wealth the show to me had brought:
For
oft, when on my couch I lie
In
vacant or in pensive mood,
They
flash upon that inward eye
Which
is the bliss of solitude;
And
then my heart with pleasure fills,
And dances
with the daffodils.
In
a mere 153 words, the poet conjures up in the reader’s mind more than simply an
image of some daffodils - more even than the whole scene he saw. He seems to
magically offer to the reader the happy feeling the scene brought about in him.
With words, he causes a spring breeze to cool the reader’s cheek. No wonder his
name is Wordsworth!
Photo by Susannah Pearce |
Poetry
consists of words - with a weird magic, much like the way an optical illusion
boggles the visual senses. Or a great work of art transcends a mere diagram of
the same scene. What gives them this mysterious quality?
I
think the answer is found in the most memorable passage of Antoine de
Saint-ExupĂ©ry’s strange and beautiful novella, “The Little Prince”: “It is only
with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the
eye.”
A Wise Fox
These
wise words were said to the little prince by the fox that had asked the prince to
tame him – and was now, as a result, sad to have to say good-bye. What is essential
is the relationship – the ritual and care - that had transformed them both when
the fox had been tamed by the boy.
It
gives a deep quality to their vision, by which they see each other differently
than they see all other boys and all other foxes. It is the mutual caretaking
of what lies between the two that sparks to life something that did not
previously exist in either.
Paage from "The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery. Photo by Susannah Pearce |
Transformed by a Spark
This
spark of life also transforms words from description into poetry. The scene
inspires the poet, whose careful attention and work “tames the scene”, giving
it a meaning it did not previously possess when it was not his. The poet becomes
responsible for the version of the scene, which captured his imagination and he
translated onto paper.
It
can be the same with a painting. The exact rendering and balanced composition in
a work of art is not the only thing that makes it an object of beauty. It is
often wrongly said that beauty is in the eye of the beholder – as if beauty is
merely an opinion. In reality, beauty is, in a way, in the heart of the
beholder. And what is in the heart of the beholder is a recognition of the
beauty that actually exists in the thing. The appreciation of this objective
beauty makes the artist more than he was – and he makes the scene into a new
thing – his thing - on canvas.
Delight in Beauty
An
artist or poet then invites the beholder of his work to share in this weird
magic. It is felt by the reader or viewer as delight – a sort of tickle deep in
the heart. That is what good poetry and great art do. They enfold the observer
in the embrace of the original relationship and the beauty recognized.
That
there is in us the capacity for delight is itself a bit of magic. Why should
our hearts tickle at the sight of, the memory of, or another person’s account
of beauty? What beautiful relationship are we being enfolded into? Where does
this magic come from?
"Mother and Chile" By Emile Levy (1826 - 1890) (Public Domain) |
We
do not create it ourselves. Think of a mother delighting in her baby. She smiles
at him and her smile causes the delighted baby to smile, which increases her
delight in him. All of creation resounds with the creation and cultivation of a
divine poet. The Poet of perfection.
Words
well composed are sometimes worth a great deal more than a picture. They allow
us to participate in the poetry of creation
This article was first published on The Epoch Times.
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