Saturday, January 17, 2015

William Shakespeare, The Histories

Introduction

Opening Passage: Since we're dealing with ten plays (although I'll only focus on the War of Roses plays below), it doesn't make sense to do an ordinary passage. But I thought it would be interesting to give a brief summary of how each play opens, because it shows how diverse the plays are.

King John: John with his mother Elinor receives the French ambassador Chatillon, and discovers that the French King lays claim to England.

Richard II: Richard II asks John of Gaunt about the accusation John's son Henry is bringing against Thomas Mowbray as he prepares to get a passive-aggressive revenge on both for causing a tumult earlier in his reign.

1 Henry IV: Henry IV notes that he finally has a bit of peace and intends to go to Jerusalem on Crusade; he will, of course, never be able to do so.

2 Henry IV: The goddess Rumour in a monologue explains how she has been spreading lies about the Battle of Shrewsbury.

Henry V: The Chorus in a monologue begs the audience's pardon for being unable to do justice to the tale.

1 Henry VI: The nobles of the realm begin to bicker and quarrel at Henry V's funeral.

2 Henry VI: Suffolk brings Margaret to be Henry VI's queen and with Henry VI's agreeing to Suffolk's negotiated treaty for the marriage, which involves simply giving away most of what his father won from France and receiving nothing but Margaret in return.

3 Henry VI: Warwick, York, and others discuss how King Henry VI and Queen Margaret managed to escape capture despite being almost in their grasp.

Richard III: Richard, who is perhaps unsurprisingly the chorus to his own play, reflects on the complete victory of his family with the ascension of his brother to the throne, and how it is not enough for him.

Henry VIII: A Prologue warns the audience that the tale is not a merry but a serious one.

Summary: The War of the Roses plays take us through seven kings: Richard II, Henry IV, Henry V, Henry VI, Edward IV, Edward V, and Richard III, stretching from 1398 to 1485. The history is sometimes stricter, sometimes looser, but all together the plays, despite being very different from each other, hang together remarkably well. Through it all we see an image of kingship, moving from Richard II, for whom the crown is something to which he was born, to Henry IV who deposed him, for whom the crown is something to hold by force, to Henry V, for whom the crown is a standard to which he must rise, to Henry VI, for whom being king is lesser and worldly matter, to Richard III, for whom kingship is merely a game of power.

I won't look in detail at each of the plays, but only focus on some of the interesting things that arise by reading them together. One of the emerging themes that I noticed was that of the King's name. Richard II, coming back to England and finding Henry Bolingbroke in virtual possession of everything, says, "Is not the King's name twenty thousand names?" (Act II, Scene 2). But the irony is that the King's name turns out to be practically worthless; it pulls no weight, whereas Bolingbroke's moves the kingdom. We get an echo of the same, as a sort of bookend, when Richard III says, "Besides, the King's name is a tower of strength, / Which they upon the adverse faction want" (Act V, Scene 3). But the King's name does no more good for Richard III than it did for Richard II.

The irony, though, is that the King's name can have power, and we see it manifested in 2 Henry VI (Act IV, Scene 8) when a popular uprising is broken by nothing other than the name of Henry V, who by this point has been dead for years. That shows the power of a King's name, as does Henry V itself, which portrays a king who lived so greatly that the play itself concedes that he will not fit on the stage -- he must instead fit into the hearts and minds of those who watch the play. Richard II failed to tend his garden, and was choked out by the weeds; Henry IV had all the capability, but having received his crown through illegitimate means finds all his competence devoted to keeping it; Henry VI is weak, having little enough ambition for the crown and no training to hold it; Richard III is a poisonous spider for whom all the accoutrements of kingship are mere tools for having his way. Henry V alone does anything that gives power to the King's name, combining the counsel of his father with his own competence and an excellent sense of his nation.

A theme that comes through clearly is the theme of might vs. right. This is most baldly shown in the opposition between Richmond and Richard III; Richmond's oration to his soldiers is all about justice and Richard III's oration to his soldiers is all about strength. But it is not a simplistic opposition. Richard II was rightful king, but he did not have the strength to hold the kingship. Henry IV was a much better man than Richard II, and had the strength, but his deposition of Richard is an illegitimate act that permeates like a kind of original sin all the reigns that follow. Henry VI is a good and pious man whose goodness is such as to make him weak and utterly unable to put his kingdom in order. The villain of the kings, the man who really believes -- insists, in fact -- that might is all that matters, is Richard III, of course. But his true opposite is not the pious but ineffective Henry VI; it is Henry V, who in his all-too-short reign can combine both power and justice.

One of the things that I found reading all the way through was that doing so brought out some smaller details that tend to be overlooked when we look at a play at a time. For instance, one starts noticing that there is a repeated linking of Falstaff with a failure to repent. His constant impenitence is as much part of his character as his boisterous wit, but it tends to get drowned out in any particular scene. It also becomes much clearer just how much of a potential disaster Falstaff is for the kingdom: he is thoroughly corrupt and is using Hal for his own ends, although part of the vastness of character of Shakespeare's Falstaff is that this is mixed in with a genuine affection for the Prince. Almost every time we see him he is quite literally destroying some key part of society, whether it be by mockery or by dissolution or by finding a way to turn public responsibility to private profit. He has no respect for office, for law, for order, and a kingdom in his hands would soon be taken by a plague of corruption. Richard II was partly brought down by corrupt flatterers; Falstaff would have been ten times worse than any of them, being vastly more capable, and thus capable of more corruption and more flattery. The dread of a regime dominated by Falstaff, which is expressed after the death of Henry IV by the princes and ministers of the kingdom, is not hyperbolic.

Another thing that I found noticeable reading all the way through was that it brings out more clearly the humor of Henry V -- or perhaps, more accurately, the humor of King Henry V himself. There are great many features of the play that show that this high-minded and noble king is in fact the same person as the wild Prince Hal. The kind of prank the King pulls on Bates and Fluellen, for instance, is exactly the sort that we see him pulling in the earlier plays as Prince Hal. He goes around in disguise in every play in which he is found. And he jokes a lot. I don't think this is an accident. Of all the Kings, Henry V is the only one who has a fully developed sense of humor, or even really much of a sense of humor at all, and I think this is integral to what makes him the greatest of the Kings. It is also, I think, the reason why Shakespeare seems so insistent that it is important both that Prince Hal have his wild days and that these don't define who he is. More on this point about humor in a moment.

I also gained something of an appreciation for Shakespeare's ability to convey action by very minimal means. His battle scenes are consistently brilliant, for all that they have to fit on a stage and mostly be conveyed by dialogue and some minor skirmishing. You get a sense of an immense flurry of things happening at Shrewsbury and Agincourt, or of an almost superhuman inevitability in the collapse of the English hold on France in the face of the whirlwind of Joan of Arc's supernatural ability -- as Shakespeare's 1 Henry VI would have it, a literally demonic ability.

I mentioned before that I also watched Orson Welles' Chimes at Midnight and listened to the Columbia Presents Shakespeare version of both parts of Henry IV. In addition, on Mrs Darwin's recommendation, I watched The Hollow Crown production, by the BBC, of the first four plays in the series. Richard II was excellent: Ben Whishaw manages an extraordinary feat in playing a Richard who is at once extraordinarily over the top, yet also surprisingly sympathetic and strangely plausible. It works almost perfectly, particularly given the very stylized way much of the movie is handled, which fits the play very well. It made me appreciate the play in entirely new ways. I very much liked Henry IV, Part 1 and Henry IV, Part 2; Jeremy Irons is a surprisingly good Henry IV, and Tom Hiddleston handles Prince Hal quite well, and Simon Russell Beale is the only Falstaff I've come across who can rival Welles's version of him. I found the switching around of scenes to be somewhat exasperating, since there often didn't seem much reason to do it, but they do still manage to convey the riot-and-tumult disorder that is important for the plays. What I'd look to end with, though, is the reasons why I think the Hollow Crown Henry V doesn't live up to the potential of the other three, even though it should be the crowning film.

There are some obvious technical problems. All of the movies are abridged to fit into two hours, and one can question this or that editing choice for most of them, but this is the only one that is definitely badly cut. The way this one is cut, we literally have instances in which characters speak to people who are not there, allude to events that did not happen, and say things that make no sense at all in the context actually given. The worst aspect of this is that you have conversations that are cut far too short to make sense while at the same time having long conversations and monologues that, while fine in themselves, seem interminable in comparison with all the overchopped scenes around them, which is made even worse by the strange tendency to chop action scenes more and talking scenes less.

The action is also surprisingly un-action-y. You have only to compare the Battle of Agincourt in this movie to the Battle of Agincourt in Kenneth Branagh's Henry V, or to the Battle of Shrewsbury in Orson Welles's Chimes at Midnight (which clearly influenced Branagh) to see how defective the battle here is. A scene that sums up the problem for me is one in which we see the heavy French cavalry on the field -- the costuming, incidentally, is one of the things done very well in this movie, and I was heartened to see something that actually looked somewhat like a heavy cavalry -- and are quietly sitting waiting. Meanwhile, we cut to English archers just across the field, who are still finishing setting up. Once the archers have finished their defensive preparations, the French cavalry trots across the relatively short distance between them and the archers have time to shoot all of them down before they are halfway across. In a real battle, if the archers were still setting up when the heavy cavalry, the heavy cavalry would charge across that field like madmen, because if you can get even just one or two knights all the way across, goodbye longbowmen! That's essentially what happened at the Battle of Patay in 1429: the English archers accidentally gave their position away before they were ready, and the French (who had almost nothing in their favor except heavy cavalry) mowed them down, turning what could have been another Agincourt into a rout of the English. French heavy cavalry are no good against English longbowmen with an open field and defensive preparations that will force the cavalry to slow down, but the way it was shown made no sense at all of that. And it's noticeable. I don't think you need to know even the tiny bit I know about cavalry to get the sense that the scene lacked tension. There's no real excuse for it, either; as I noted, Shakespeare's battles are already well done, so you just have to add icing on the cake.

But all of this is secondary. What I think is the greatest problem with the production brings me back to the humor of the play. Henry V is a funny play. It's easy to overlook this, in part because it follows 1 Henry IV and 2 Henry IV with their riotously comic scenes, and in part because the play is doing so much that's very serious. But Henry is a joker. We see this in the beginning when he's answering the Dauphin's gift of tennis balls:

And tell the pleasant prince this mock of his
Hath turn'd his balls to gun-stones; and his soul
Shall stand sore charged for the wasteful vengeance
That shall fly with them: for many a thousand widows
Shall this his mock mock out of their dear husbands;
Mock mothers from their sons, mock castles down;
And some are yet ungotten and unborn
That shall have cause to curse the Dauphin's scorn.

Serious words, yes, but Henry is carrying over the tennis theme; mock, of course, is the sound that tennis balls make. The ways a good actor could bring this out are legion; it wouldn't take much at all. But it's important to recognize that it is there. Part of what Henry is doing is topping the Dauphin's joke.

This version didn't do much with the tennis ball scene, but that's always hit-and-miss, so I wasn't expecting it. But this movie has no real sense of humor. The actors sometimes manage to get it in, in bits and pieces, but as a whole, we get very little. Mistress Quickly's account of Falstaff's death, which should be bittersweet-funny, is hardly funny at all. The most facepalming case, I think, is when they bungle the prank with the gloves. It is very explicitly written as a prank in the play; he sets everybody up and then sends Exeter along to make sure that hot-tempered Fluellen doesn't kill poor Bates before anyone realizes what is going on. And as I noted above, it's exactly the kind of thing wild Prince Hal used to do. But here they chop it all up so it isn't clear what's going on, and Henry just comes across as a bit of an ass.

While that's an egregious example, it's not a load-bearing example. The real problem shows up in the relation between Henry and Kate. Henry V, of course, has what is one of the best -- I would say the best -- bawdy jokes in the history of English literature, in Act III, Scene 4. It's a short scene that builds characterization very quickly, and properly done needs to be quite funny -- it's basically a series of cute jokes culminating in a bawdy joke based on the fact that certain ordinary English words sound like dirty words in French. We learn from the scene that Katherine is intelligent, a bit saucy (the "Excusez-moi, Alice; écoutez" is hilarious in itself), entirely a lady, and yet has a bold sense of humor. Branagh's Henry V did fairly with it. It falls completely flat here, although Thierry does manage almost to save it with her reaction at the end. In some sense that makes it worse, because it shows that she could have pulled it off; but at least Thierry managed to get something essential out of it.

But the relative humorlessness carries over into one of the essential scenes of the play: Act V, Scene 2. It is this scene that establishes that Henry V's entire project has been completely a success. And part of what is essential is to establish that Henry and Katherine will get along well. We've already seen that the Princess has a sense of humor; and part of what makes their interaction work is that she does have a sense of humor and Henry at full blast is truly funny. Every time she says something, he turns it into a joke, and by joking he maneuvers her into a kiss, despite the fact that she clearly knows exactly what he is doing. The humor can be turned in many different ways, but the wooing needs to be done lightheartedly to set the tone for the end of the play, which is the same as the tone for a comedy, because this history is, in fact, structured like a comedy that ends in the victory of a marriage. It falls flat here, played too heavily. (I also don't understand why they got rid of Queen Isabel, who quite clearly needs to be involved, both for the impending marriage of Henry and Kate and the impending marriage of France and England in them.)

I've gone on about this at some length because humor is not a foreign intrusion into anything Shakespeare does; it is an integral part of the whole. This Henry needs to be connected with the Prince Hal of the previous plays. But more than this, his having a sense of humor is part of his greatness. It is his capacity for pranking that makes it possible for him to go around his army in disguise and talk with his men. It is impossible to imagine any other King in the series doing the same -- Richard II has too exalted a sense of himself, Henry VI is too distant from everything (notably he actively avoids talking with anyone he doesn't have to), Richard III is too outright evil to have a real sense of humor -- if Richard III finds something funny, you can bet it won't be to anyone else. Henry IV, we learn early in Richard II, gets much of his popularity from courtesy to common folk, and Henry V is certainly his father's son so far, but Henry IV can't really be imagined doing much more. Only Henry V could seriously strike up a solid conversation with some random soldier in his army; and the reason is the same reason that only he could play a joke on the same soldier. Because of this, I think it's important to take seriously the repeated insistence across all three Hal plays that in Hal's wild youth with Falstaff and Poins he was just learning the language, hiding his greatness, and the like. This is precisely how we see Henry unfold. And the result is that he's the only King who actually has any real feel for the life of the common person.

It's sometimes noted that a factor in the popularity of politicians is whether ordinary people could imagine having a beer with them. That's a good way to put the difference here. Of all the Kings, Henry V, who as Prince spent more than his share of time in a public house, is the only one you could literally sit down and chat over beer with. Richard II made the mistake of thinking that the greatness of a King lies in how high he is. But the greatness of a King is not in the height he can reach or how lowly he can be but in how he fills up the space between. Had Henry been in Richard's place, he would have had the commons on his side, just as the mere mention of his name manages to tame the common rabble in his son's day. And that is shown entirely by the fact that Henry V has a good humor -- you can play it as good nature or as friendly mischief or as a quiet sense of fun or as many other things, but it is certainly there -- and Richard has none. And this, I think, is a major part of the excellence of what we get in these plays. Leave it to Shakespeare to recognize that a true King to fulfill his God-given role needs, besides dignity and strength, humor.

Favorite Passage: There are lots of good passages, of course. This one struck me most this readthrough. It is the prayer of Henry V before Agincourt, and thus occupies a central place in the whole, and I think tells us a lot about how Shakespeare himself understood his War of the Roses cycle:

O God of battles! steel my soldiers' hearts;
Possess them not with fear; take from them now
The sense of reckoning, if the opposed numbers
Pluck their hearts from them. Not to-day, O Lord,
O, not to-day, think not upon the fault
My father made in compassing the crown!
I Richard's body have interred anew;
And on it have bestow'd more contrite tears
Than from it issued forced drops of blood:
Five hundred poor I have in yearly pay,
Who twice a-day their wither'd hands hold up
Toward heaven, to pardon blood; and I have built
Two chantries, where the sad and solemn priests
Sing still for Richard's soul. More will I do;
Though all that I can do is nothing worth,
Since that my penitence comes after all,
Imploring pardon.

And God will listen to the prayer, as we later find; but it will only be a short respite, for the effects of Henry IV's deposition of Richard II have not yet finished working itself out....

Recommendation: Well, obviously, it's going to be highly recommended.

Friday, January 16, 2015

Links for Linking

I've been busy on and off with starting up the term. This term doesn't look like it will be difficult overall, but it looks I'll be extraordinarily busy the next couple of weeks, so we'll see how posting goes in the near future.

* At "D-brief" there's a post discussing how gardeners are accidentally interfering with the life cycle of Monarch butterflies by planting the wrong kind of milkweed in an attempt to help them.

* Thomas Hobbes's attempt to explain Prince Rupert's drops. (As I've mentioned before, Prince Rupert's drops were a kind of early modern novelty item that went by several different names. The 'Prince Rupert' is the brother of Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia; Rupert didn't invent them, but seems to have contributed to their popularity.)

* Selections from the geological field notebooks of Henry M. Cadell.

* The history of Braille.

* Nicolas Steno and the Principles of Modern Geology at "yovisto blog". It is not, however, entirely clear that Steno "essentially abandoned science" when he became a priest; there's some evidence he continued at least to maintain his interest in the structure of the brain. But there hasn't really been much work done on Steno's later thought, in part (I suspect, since I'm not a researcher on Steno particularly, only interested in his work) because of the relative lack of evidence. It is true, though, that given all the things that was doing once he became a priest, he may well not have had much time for serious scientific pursuits.

* Aili Bresnahan at the SEP on the Philosophy of Dance.

* Eugene Marshall at the IEP on Margaret Cavendish.
Ronnie Littlejohn at the IEP has a historical overview of Chinese philosophy.

* Joseph Heath and Benoit Hardy-Vallée discuss the implications of intoxicated behavior for moral psychology in Why Do People Behave Immorally When Drunk?

* T. Greer on Sunzi (Sun-tzu).

* Pater Edmund discusses Vatican II's Declaration on Religious Liberty:
Religious Liberty and Tradition I
Religious Liberty and Tradition II
Religious Liberty and Tradition III
Religious Liberty and Tradition IV
Dubium: Can the State Limit Non-Catholic Religions?

* John Lamont reflects on attacks on 'manualist theology'

* Kareem Abdul Jabar is co-authoring a Sherlock Holmes pastiche about Mycroft. Apparently he's quite the fan of Sherlock Holmes.

* Suburbanbanshee on freedom of the press.

* James Hannam on the mounting problems with the dating of ancient events in Babylonia and Egypt.

* Whewell's Ghost #30 has lots of history-of-science links.

* Ashok at "Rethink" discusses William Butler Yeats's poem, "The Choice".

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Music on My Mind



Mes Aïeux, "Dégénérations". The history of Quebec in a nutshell. And of many other places.

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Impassioned Reasoning and Impassioned Feeling

Impassioned reasoning, guided by what Newman calls the heart and the eye for truth, leads to truth. But an equal amount of passion, without the sense of responsibility and of the importance of truth, carries the mind to any prejudice which it is set on defending, much as wine may enliven and render more intelligent the discourse of a serious man, while it gets the better of another and stops his speech altogether.

Wilfrid Philip Ward, "The Wish to Believe" in Witnesses to the Unseen, and Other Essays (1893), p. 283.

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Idolatry of Artefacts

What is learned by trial and error must begin by being crude, whatever the character of the beginner. The very same pot which would prove its maker a genius if it were the first pot ever made in the world, would prove its maker a dunce if it came after milleniums of pot-making. The whole modern estimate of primitive man is based upon the idolatry of artefacts which is a great corporate sin of our own civilisation.

C. S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain, Collier (New York: 1962) p. 74. In other words, the things we make are at least as much a product of history up to us as they are a product of our intelligence or moral character; that 'primitive man' had no reliable anesthetics is not a sign that they were less compassionate, and that they had no reliable medicine is not a sign that they lacked the cognitive skills required for having reliable medicine. Our brilliance is not measured by smartphones, our rationality is not measured by wifi, and our virtue is not measured by the internet; we may, for all we can tell, be massively overtopped in all three by someone who has nothing more than basic language and fire.

Monday, January 12, 2015

On Obama's Community College Plan

President Obama last week proposed a plan to make community college tuition free for two years "for everyone who is willing to work for it", in order to make community college more accessible. I don't have a huge amount to say about it, but there are things that need to be said; the primary problem of the plan is that it seems very much like a plan developed by someone who doesn't actually know how community colleges work.

(1) Money is not a major accessibility problem for community college. In reports it has been commonly said that the plan would affect 9 million students; this is about how many students make use of community college in the U.S., which immediately shows that it's not true. A significant percentage of students in community college already have their education free -- and for longer than two years, if they need it. One of the things that was rightly pointed out by some critics after the announcement is that it will affect almost nobody but the fairly well to do. The average cost of community college for low-income families across the entire nation is nearly zero. Pretty much all community colleges are set up to make community college affordable already, especially for low-income students, and the cost of it can be zero even before we get to the many students whose tuition is already paid by Pell Grant or through the Army or some other source. Community college students are already highly subsidized by taxpayers, and the students who pay most are the students who only do their college piecemeal. The White House says that "A full-time community college student could save an average of $3,800 in tuition per year," but the percentage of community college students who would actually save this much is very small, and almost entirely from upper income brackets.

This is not to say that it would have no effect (because of variability across the nation it will have some effect some places and none at all others), but affordability is not high on the list of accessibility problems for community colleges.

(2) What factors are major problems for community college accessibility? There are two that are particularly noteworthy:

(a) inadequate preparation
(b) insufficient time

The first can be put aside; it would require an entirely different approach. But it's worth thinking of the plan in terms of the second, because it puts the problem with the plan in sharp relief. As he's formulated it, "Students who attend at least half-time, maintain a 2.5 GPA while in college, and make steady progress toward completing their program will have their tuition eliminated." One of the major problems community college instructors have is that their students are often forced to take their classes on the fly. It's not uncommon to get students who, in addition to their courses, are working forty or more hours a week or (sometimes even and) raising children at home as single parents. I once taught a hybrid course (half normal, half online) in which over half the students were working full time. I had one student, a very good one, who worked sixty hours a week and had to sacrifice his lunch hour once a week to come to class, and another who could only take the course because her employer treated an Introduction to Philosophy course (which she was taking as a required elective for her program) as job-relevant training, and let her go during work hours. These are students who are undeniably "willing to work for it"; they are more willing to work for it than many students who have more time. But the plan passes them by, despite the fact that the demographic of students with little time or flexibility of schedule is one of the major focuses of community colleges in the first place. (I suppose they could be shoehorned in the requirement that eligible community colleges have "promising and evidence-based institutional reforms to improve student outcomes", but that is both vague and very indirect.) There's no need to expect a plan about college to do everything all at once; but if the goal really is to make community college more accessible, and to guarantee that it's free for students who are "willing to work for it", this plan doesn't actually give us anything that is likely to do much for either of those things.

(3) Anyone who works with community colleges much is going to see immediately a potential problem with the plan: what is meant by "two years"? There are lots of different ways you can measure time at a college: from first enrollment, from first signing on to a plan, within a single institution or across a college career, consecutively or not. These questions become quite significant at the community college level, at which students come and go and come and go. And one of the things you learn quickly when dealing with legal policies regarding colleges is that politicians simply never have any clue about this issue. In Texas, for instance, we got a state law in which students were only allowed six withdrawals from courses. Nobody knew how to interpret it. Did that mean across their entire college career? Probably not, but the law didn't say. Did it mean for a particular college? Probably, but the law didn't say. Did it mean for a consecutive stretch of taking classes (e.g., suppose someone uses up their withdrawals and then comes back two years later)? The law didn't say. If we're talking about two years in terms of calendar years, this is ridiculously short for the typical community college education. If we measure it in terms of position in a program (which is what the statement actually sounds like), we run into questions about things like advanced placement credits or remedial programs. Can a student take one year at one community college and another at another -- since community colleges often lose students due to job moves? Do they have to be consecutive years? What about the common scenario of students who are at community colleges because they are in situations where how students can use their time can change suddenly -- pregnancy, taking care of a sick family member, frailty, loss of house, sudden inability to pay bills due to someone else in the family losing a crucial job? (I have had students run into serious problems from every single one of these; they are not hypothetical.) How does this get factored into the equation? And so on, and so forth. Educators have to get used to badly written laws, since most education-focused laws are badly written; but these things still need to be pointed out.


So it's not really a great plan for what it is supposed to do. On the other side, I suppose, it's very far from being the worst higher education plan that I've ever heard a politician float. It probably won't get through Congress -- although that doesn't mean we won't be served up instead some mish-mash of political compromises that's worse. And it's possible that it would do reasonably well, although for the reasons above it's not going to have anything like the impact its supporters are claiming. And the plan does have other minor reforms that I haven't looked at closely -- changes in student loans and grants for community colleges and the like.

Psyche Usurps the Outward Eye

Reflection
by Roy Campbell


My thought has learned the lucid art
By which the willows lave their limbs
Whose form upon the water swims
Though in the air they rise apart.
For when with my delight I lie,
By purest reason unreproved,
Psyche usurps the outward eye
To trace her inward sculpture grooved
In one melodious line, whose flow
With eddying circle now invests
The rippled silver of her breasts,
Now shaves a flank of rose-lit snow,
Or rounds a cheek where sunset dies
in the black starlight of her eyes.

Roy Campbell was a South African poet, and a controversial figure. Jorge Luis Borges regarded his English translations of the verse of St. John of the Cross as masterpieces, and he is often considered one of the best poets writing in English between the two World Wars. He wrote scathing attacks on the Bloomsbury Group, whom he regarded as parasites, calling them 'intellectuals without intellect'. He supported Franco. Very famously he met C. S. Lewis at an Inklings meeting once, and they got along awfully; Lewis had written a poem attacking Campbell's work and insisted on reading it aloud to Campbell -- although Campbell's good-natured handling of it seems to have helped keep things calm, and he met up with the Inklings several more times. Tolkien, however, liked him, and it is sometimes suggested that some aspects of Aragorn were based on him; Tolkien thought that Lewis's dislike was mostly his prejudice against Catholics. He led a very eventful life; one of his feats was saving the archives of a Carmelite library from being destroyed by the republican forces in Spain -- an archive that included letters by St. John of the Cross.

Sunday, January 11, 2015

God's Socratic Method

It seems as if Infinite Wisdom delighted in adopting with human beings the process known as the Socratic Method, by which the most difficult truths are easily elicited from the lips of illiterate persons and of children; the secret simply consisting of a few interrogatives skilfully arranged in a certain order. In this way, I believe, does God act towards His creatures. He ordains that things which are marvellous, and wholly at variance with their modes of thinking, should happen before the eyes of men, that being struck with wonder at the novelty, they may feel prompted to direct their attention to investigating the hidden causes of things. He does not wish to say everything Himself, because, being good, He does not wish His beloved creature, man, to remain idle and inert, or to be deprived of the noble gratification and merit which he can gain by instructing himself in many things. To this end, He has endowed man with the faculty of knowing, that he may enjoy the honest pleasure of developing knowledge for himself, of being in part his own teacher.

Antonio Rosmini, Theodicy, volume 1, page 7.