by Duo Yu  as translated by Simon Patton First published on the Chinese site Zhongguo Yishu Piping


Inside me, it's all darkness

 


May 1, 2006

In an article published last year on a site devoted to Chinese art and literature criticism, Duo Yu set out some of his views on poetry. An excerpt translated from this article spells out the poet’s obsession with human kind's “dark side”.

 

Inside me, it’s all darkness. Since the beginning, I have been cautiously avoiding these dark corners, covering them up, but they grew steadily bigger until they became alienated and turned into a cancer of the spirit. Since the beginning, this has been the reality of my writing.

 

 

I no longer feel ashamed or, to put it another way, I no longer feel shame in those moments of shame. I bite my nails, pick my nose, look down on the poor, tell lies to God, spit in public places, hug myself with pleasure, am narrow-minded, support war without taking part in it, fantasize about sex, am suspicious, block my ears to the song of the swan, no longer regard art as being a kind of gold . . . But this is not the sum total of the blackness I have inside me, and if I could bring myself to face it in its entirety, I know that it would suddenly transform into light!

 

I see that there are still many people who are ashamed of this darkness. In other words, they feel shame when they no longer feel ashamed. They try to cover it up rather than expel it or face up to it. They cover up the darkness with beautiful, imposing words: REPONSIBILITY, JUSTICE, MORALITY, CLEAR CONSCIENCE, FREEDOM, ABUNDANCE, HUMAN NATURE, MAGNANIMITY, PASSION, AWAKENING, IDEALISM . . . And so the world seems sparkling and radiant, while life becomes appealing and pretty!

 

We have heard too many of these utterly mediocre and yet stirring cliches. First, there is an attempt to lay down a standard for the new poetry, just like some big meeting to revise the constitution, then, without running the slightest sense risk, moralistic judgements are proposed, coherent appeals, nationalistic . . . With one step one lurches from right to left, from the idealism of utopia to revolutionary-romantic realism, from a revised avant-garde to revolutionary leftism, from a bellicose art for art’s sake to a moralism completely cut of from the world, from that total blackness to the limpidity of a Great Master.

 

This way of going about things is rather too simple. As far as poetry goes, are these big words self-evident or not? Will they make poetry more abstract or will they bring it closer to reality? More distinct or more murky? When people turn away from themselves and try to shock in a new way, still working with established concepts and systems of categories but wearing a new disguise, will they bring us liberation, breakthroughs and subversions, or new obstacles and threats — perhaps the most terrible of all obstacles?

Under the pretence of a crowd-pleasing aesthetics, and by making use of those impulses towards ingratiation, such new literary tricks do their utmost to cram a large amount of wholly incompatible and mutually contradictory notions into some kind of form, some outline of orthodox doctrine, trying to cover up those irritatingly difficult problems and to sort out chaos for the sake of revolution. As a result, do they undergo, completely unawares, a transformation from resistance to repression? Another question: what kind of poets count as true poets? The ones who take the burden of morality and justice on their shoulders, and who use a megaphone to make speeches to the world? Or is it those meek and pedantic people who, uninterested in public affairs, modestly question this apparently harmless faith in big words in the quiet of their studies? 

Great figures such as Tolstoy wavered between their own art and the good conscience of society. Anna Akhmatova said that the only reason why Tolstoy killed off Anna Karenina was to placate the moral standards of his aunts in Moscow. The slightest vacillation in the depths of one’s being can influence the direction one’s writing takes. The darkness of the mind is a fundamental reality. As Simone Weil once said “all truth contains contradiction within it” and “the contradictions the spirit encounters are the only reality, the most real criterion”. Art is a way of dealing with suffering. Loneliness is another, and so is suicide. So Susan Sontag said.

 

For these reasons, I am fed up with those mediocre sermons and with that Romantic inflation of the ego. Apart from being used to save oneself or to dilute the darkness inside the mind, poetry no longer has any eternal values. Poets have their own specific 'feelers', and all they need do is sniff the smell of the wind to know whether there is a revolution taking place in the public square. Poets have their own doubts and suspicions which await being dispelled. They have no realizations of Truth, they are not prophets (under the influence of supernatural forces) of an abiding truth, nor are they dangerous liars of genius.

 

What is a poet? This has never been a coherent concept. And so for this reason there are so many people full of revolutionary impulses making startling pronouncements in the realm of poetry. Yang Jian said that he was a poet before Liberation, and was still a poet after Liberation — he is a real poet. The requirements are not difficult: all one has to do is to speak a simple fact. To use another fashionable term, poetry is a form of personal salvation. Real poets confront themselves first and foremost; poetry should become a tongue that speaks for personal salvation. Is it a matter of using knowledge, morality, lies . . . to save a poem, or to save a person by means of a poem? This is the test of a true poetry.


Source:
 http://china.poetryinternational.org/piw_cms/cms/cms_module/index.php?obj_id=6661





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Written on 2012-02-20 at 06:21

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After reading this I wondered how old Duo Yu was when he wrote it. It seems he was about 33 (born in 1973). I wondered because there is a kind of certainty in his writing that tends to come with youth (youth being a relative term). With age tends to come dogma or uncertainty. Trying to sort out what poetry means is a big task best taken on by those still flexible of mind.

Besides age, I was struck by the nationalistic considerations of his argument, not something one would find in a Western based essay I don't think (poetry being slightly less significant in Western culture than daytime tv dramas, as opposed to Chinese culture where people go to jail for their words and artistic expressions).

Duo Yu seems to conclude that art (poetry) is easily over-inflated, and best keep it simple: "save oneself or to dilute the darkness inside the mind..."

Even that is not simple enough. Duo Yu may be right, but things change. Eventually it isn't about saving oneself or diluting the darkness, but recognizing the most basic human needs: comfort and peace of mind, not necessarily your own, and how hard it is to come by those things, and perhaps, as a writer, being able to get a word or two about those needs down on paper.

Then I thought of this poem by Philip Larkin (his last published poem as far as I know) and conclude it's all the same thing: finding comfort, peace of mind, diluting the darkness, saving oneself—find it where you can, however you can. It's a matter of preference as to how, and the words that come from the search seem to be poetry.

Party Politics

I never remember holding a full drink.
My first look shows the level half-way down.
What next? Ration the rest, and try to think
Of higher things, until mine host comes around?

Some people say, best show an empty glass:
Someone will fill it. Well, I've tried that too.
You may get drunk, or dry hours may pass.
It seems to turn on where you are. Or who.
2012-02-21



Wise words from a wise man. Yet, I think it is a mistake to fully identify with Darkness, or with Light, or any other abstractions. So much 20th century poetry deified hopelessness and the futility of life. And of course there is hopelessness and futility--we've all felt it and we don't really need a Beckett or a Sartre (both artists whom I respect and enjoy) to tell us that life sometimes sucks.

But I think there is also room for the Romantics and the optimists. I was reading Keats today and, though he was 'well acquainted with the night,' to borrow from Frost, he also knew how important it is to celebrate when things are going well and to seize beauty and truth when they surface from the darkness.

Thanks, Team, for publishing this lovely and provocative essay.
2012-02-20