INTRODUCTION:
Plato, the celebrated
disciple of Socrates, lived between 427-347 B.C. Plato’s works are the earliest
example of literary criticism. His writings began the arguments for and against
the merits of poetry. Plato was not a professed critic of literature and his
critical observations are not embodied in any single work. His interest was
philosophical investigation, which forms the subject of his great work
‘Dialogues’. His utterances on literature which occur during the course of
philosophic al discussion in several of his dialogues particularly in ‘Ion’,
‘Cratylus’, ‘Laws’, Philebus’, ‘Republic’ etc. They are no more than scattered
references in a bigger context, the profundity of their thoughts makes them a
very important contribution, the first of its kind to the art of criticism.
Atkins has rightly said,
“In the suggestive and stimulating quality of his
writings he remains unsurpassed.”
REASONS FOR
PLATO’S OBJECTION AGAINST POETRY:
Plato is the
rationalist devoted to the proposition that reason must be followed whatever it
leads. Thus the care of Plato’s philosophy, resting upon a foundation of
external Ideas or Forms, is a rationalistic ethics.
In his Republic Plato
expresses his distrust for poetry. He was primarily concerned to construct an ideal
state and ideal citizens who would be a part of this state. In order to create
a good society, he makes everything including are subservient to morality. He examines
the effect of literature on public life and tries to analyze the role it would
play in moulding the life of the citizens of his ideal state. His analysis
leads him to the conclusion that the guardians of the Republiic Inspic should
send the poets and poetry to permanent exile. He criticized poetry on four
grounds.
1.
Poetic Inspiration
2.
It does not deal with reality
3.
It is immoral
4.
The emotional appeal of poetry
PLATO’S CHARGES AGAINST POETRY
POETIC INSPIRATION:
Plato disapproves of
poetry because according to him the poet writes not because he has thought over
what he has to say but because he is inspired. The Muse suddenly fills him and
makes him sing. And such a sudden outpouring of the soul can not be a reliable
substitute for truths based on reason. Guided chiefly by the impluse of the moment instead of
cool deliberation, like philosophy, it can not be relied upon to make the
individual a better citizen and the state a better organization. So Plato says,
“….Hyms to the god,
panegyrics on famous men are the only poetry which ought to admitted in our
state.”
IT DOES NOT DEAL WITH REALITY
Plato, the philosopher
disapproves of poetry because it is based on falsehood. He believes that all
arts make an attempt at emulating the ultimate reality. In the ‘Republic’ Plato
says that ideas are the ultimate reality. Things are conceived as ideas before they
take practical shape as tings. The idea of everything therefore, is its
original pattern, and the thing itself its copy. As the copy ever falls short
of the original, it is once removed from the reality. Now art- literature,
painting, sculpture- reproduces but things, the first in words, the next in
color, and the last in stone. So it merely copies a copy, it is twice removed
from reality.
Plato gives the theory of mimesis.
According to this theory poetry is twice removed from truth.To explain it he gives
very famous example of carpenter’s chair. In ‘The Republic’ Plato says that
“ideas are the ultimate reality”. Carpenter first gets an idea to make a chair,
then he shapes a chair(it is imitation of idea), then a painter draws that
chair(it is imitation of imitation), then a poet with his idea writes a poem on
the painting.
Like the example of carpenter's chair there is
another example of mimesis. That
first God imagined nature and the universe in his mind(ultimate reality), Then
he created it(imitation of an idea), then what a poet does? he writes a poem on
nature which becomes imitation of an imitation. According to Plato when such
imitation takes place something is lost from original. And then Plato says:
"The imitator or maker of
the image knows nothing of true existence ; he knows appearance only...The
imitative art is an inferior who marries an inferior and has inferior
offspring."
Plato was not willing
to accommodate anything but the ultimate truth in his ideal Republic. So,
according to him the production of art take men away from reality rather then
towards it.
IT IS IMMORAL:
Plato indicts poetry
for its lack of concern with morality. In the treatment of life it treats both virtue and vice alike, sometimes
making the one and sometimes the other triumph indifferently, without regard
for moral consideration. It pained Plato to see virtue often coming to grief in
the literature, esteemed in his day- the epics of Homer, the narrative verse of
Heroid, the odes of Pinder and the tragedies of Aeschylus, Sophocles and
Euripides. In his words from the Republic.
“They give us to
understand that many evil livers are happy and many righteous men unhappy: and
that wrong-doing, if it be undetected, is profitable, while honest dealing is
beneficial to one’s neighbour, but damaging to one’s self.”
However he
found that poetry showed God to be lustful and revengeful and it painted a hero
like Achilles as vengeful and bad tempered. The poets who portrayed the very
icons whom the people emulate as degraded and corrupt were not accepted to
Plato. Homer and other tragedians and comedians taught immorality and imitated
unworthy objects and were therefore not fit to live in his ideal republic.
THE
EMOTIONAL APPEAL OF POETRY
Plato’s last
charge against poetry arises from its appeal to the emotions. Being a product
of inspiration, it affects the emotions rather than reason, the heart rather
than the intellectual. Plato illustrates this with reference to the tragic
poetry of his age, in which weeping and wailing were indulged to the full to
move the hearts of the spectators.
In the
Republic he says that,
“If we let our own sense of pity grow strong by
feeding upon the grieves of others, it is not easy to restrain it in the case
of our own sufferings.”
So Plato
believes that poetry makes one weak by placing emphasis on emotions rather than
reason. Reason is the best guide as we act with cool and logically when under
the influence of reason. According to Plato.
“Poetry feeds and waters the passion instead of drying
them up and lets them rule instead of ruling them.”
CONCLUSION:
Atkins has
rightly said about Plato,
“It is as a pioneer in
literary theory that he figures mainly in the critical development; with him
begins the larger and more philosophical criticism which aimed at viewing
literature, in relation to life and at arriving , if possible, at the innermost
laws of its being.”
So, Plato has
given us some important startling points which can be listed as follows,
He has shown us
that arts are imitative and that the poet imitates life. He told that this
imitation gives pleasure.
He made an
important contribution by suggesting that the art of a poet or a painter is
less than reality. He thereby prepared a ground for Aristotle to prove that it
was also something more than reality.
He understood
this hidden links between the different forms of art. He understood that all
arts are based on life, are mimetic and offer pleasure even though the medium
of expression differs.
Plato’s contribution
to the critical art, thus, is considerable. Scattered in fragments though it
might be, all together read like a systematic tratise on the art of writing.
Atkins has correctly gives credit to him by saying
“With him literary
theory really begins, he set men thinking…it was in this way he made later
criticism possible.”


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