Poetry and Philosophy
Poetry – either in its most common form, or in prose – often
comprises an existentialist or philosophical content or trace.
Much poetry glosses over life and its joys, fate, destiny, our
place in the Universe, illusion, pain without reason and the
cruel element of life. The specific themes vary, but to sing, to
cry or to speculate - in a philosophical form - about the
meaning of life is part of the repertoire of dozens of great
writers.
What did Cervantes mean, when he wrote: «Blessings light on him
who invented sleep, the cloak that covers all human thoughts,
the meat that satisfies hunger, the drink for the thirst, the
heat that warms cold, the cold that moderates heat, and, lastly,
the common coin that purchases all the pleasures of the world
cheap, the balance and weight that equalizes the king and the
shepherd, the fool and the sage»?
Isn’t it existential philosophy, as much as poetry?
What did the emperor Hadrian do when he wrote his epitaph, on
the very eve of his death: «Small errant soul, guest and
companion of the body, where are you go now, pale, rigid and
naked, without being able to play as before?»
And how should we classify some of the most beautiful biblical
verses present in the Book of Ecclesiastes? How should we
classify the verses:
«Live joyfully with the wife whom you love
All the days of your life of vanity
God has given you under the sun,
For that is your portion in life,
Among the labour days you have to support under the sun»?
They are obviously philosophy, as much as poetry. They are
existentialist poetry and they are existentialist philosophy.
And to give a major modern example, we can appeal to Fernando
Pessoa. Poems such as Tobacco Kiosk are not only sublime
and major examples of human poetic genius. They are also major
examples of existentialist philosophy. Much of the poetry of
Pessoa is also philosophy.
Listen to him:
«We have conquered the whole world before leaving our beds.
But we were awakened and it was dark,
We rose and all was strange to us.»
It’s obviously philosophy. Even when he rejects it, and says:
«I savour in the cigarette the liberation of thought.
I follow the smoke like a personal itinerary
And enjoy, in a moment sensitive and capable,
The freedom of speculation
And the consciousness that metaphysic is only a result of
illness.»
Or when he says:
«Eat your chocolates, little one!
Eat your chocolates!
Know there are no metaphysics in the world but chocolates.»
Declaredly,
there is more philosophy in some poetry than in many assumed
philosophical arguments.
We may object: but isn’t Pessoa’s philosophical theme - and all
the other cited cases - too repetitive? Isn’t the poetry about
the meaning of life too limited, too restricted for the
transmission of banal philosophical equations? Is it possible to
philosophise, in its higher sense, through poetry, without true
arguments?
In a theme such as the purpose and meaning of life, yes. In this
case, to understand life, to give it a meaning or to refuse it
depends deeply on our feelings, perhaps more than on our
reason...
Profundity can be intimately connected to beauty, to art, to
novelty, to the ability of the writer to touch our souls, our
joy, our sadness, our astonishment, or his ability to open new
horizons of awareness, rather than just abstract reasoning and
argument. That’s why poetry and literature can be major vehicles
of philosophising.
See also:
Literature and philosophy:
quotes on life, lyrical reflections
Fernando Pessoa's philosophy on
life and poetry
Links between poetry on life and
philosophy on life
Poems on life: examples of
philosophical poetry
Life and Friendship
Life and Love
Philosophies of life
Happiness
Love
Essays Book