The Epic - An Essay by Lascelles Abercrombie
page 28 of 69 (40%)
page 28 of 69 (40%)
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acknowledgment that they are clearly separable from other kinds of
poetry; and this although the word epic has been rather badly abused. For instance, _The Faery Queene_ and _La Divina Commedia_ have been called epic poems; but I do not think that anyone could fail to admit, on a little pressure, that the experience of reading _The Faery Queene_ or _La Divina Commedia_ is not in the least like the experience of reading _Paradise Lost_ or the _Iliad_. But as a poem may have lyrical qualities without being a lyric, so a poem may have epical qualities without being an epic. In all the poems which the world has agreed to call epics, there is a story told, and well told. But Dante's poem attempts no story at all, and Spenser's, though it attempts several, does not tell them well--it scarcely attempts to make the reader believe in them, being much more concerned with the decoration and the implication of its fables than with the fables themselves. What epic quality, detached from epic proper, do these poems possess, then, apart from the mere fact that they take up a great many pages? It is simply a question of their style--the style of their conception and the style of their writing; the whole style of their imagination, in fact. They take us into a region in which nothing happens that is not deeply significant; a dominant, noticeably symbolic, purpose presides over each poem, moulds it greatly and informs it throughout. This takes us some little way towards deciding the nature of epic. It must be a story, and the story must be told well and greatly; and, whether in the story itself or in the telling of it, significance must be implied. Does that mean that the epic must be allegorical? Many have thought so; even Homer has been accused of constructing allegories. But this is only a crude way of emphasizing the significance of epic; and there is a vast deal of difference between a significant story and an allegorical story. Reality of substance is a thing on which epic poetry |
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