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224 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1988
INTERVIEWER: What place, if any at all, does delirium have in your working life?
ITALO CALVINO: Delirium? . . . Let鈥檚 assume I answer, I am always rational. Whatever I say or write, everything is subject to reason, clarity, and logic. What would you think of me? You鈥檇 think I鈥檓 completely blind when it comes to myself, a sort of paranoiac. If on the other hand I were to answer, Oh, yes, I am really delirious; I always write as if I were in a trance, I don鈥檛 know how I write such crazy things, you鈥檇 think me a fake, playing a not-too-credible character. Maybe the question we should start from is what of myself do I put into what I write. My answer鈥擨 put my reason, my will, my taste, the culture I belong to, but at the same time I cannot听control, shall we say, my neurosis or what we could call delirium.
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"His novel shows how everything we choose and value in life for its lightness soon reveals its true, unbearable weight. Perhaps only the liveliness and mobility of the intelligence escape this sentence - the very qualities with which this novel is written, and which belong to a world quite different from the one we live in"
"I will confine myself to telling you that I dream of immense cosmologies, sagas, and epics all reduced to the dimensions of an epigram"
Literature - and I mean the literature that matches up these requirements - is the Promised Land in which language becomes what it really ought to be.
A work of literature is one of these minimal portions in which the existent crystallizes into a form, acquires a meaning - not fixed, not definitive, not hardened into a mineral immobility, but alive as an organism. Poetry is the great enemy of chance, in spite of also being a daughter of chance and knowing
that in the last resort, chance will win the battle
But perhaps the answer that stands closest to my heart is something else: Think what it would be to have a work conceived from outside the self,a work that would let us escape the limited perspective of the individual ego, not only to enter into selves like our own but to give speech to that which has no language, to the bird perching on the edge of the gutter,
To the tree in spring and the tree in fall, to stone, to cement, to place鈥�.
POSTERITY IS STUPID
鈥楲eopardi鈥檚 miracle was to subtract so much weight from language that it came to resemble moonlight. The many appearances of the moon in his verse take up only a handful of lines, but they suffice to bathe whole poems in its light or to cast upon them the shadow of its absence.鈥�
鈥楾here are those who believe that words are the means of getting at the world鈥檚 substance鈥攊ts ultimate, unique, absolute substance; that rather than representing that substance, words become it (it is therefore mistaken to call them a means): the word knows only itself, and no other knowledge of the world is possible. Then there are those who see the use of words as a never-ending pursuit of things, an approximation not of their substance but of their infinite variety, a brushing against their manifold inexhaustible surfaces. As Hofmannsthal said, 鈥淒epth must be hidden. Where? On the surface鈥� (Die Tiefe mu脽 man verstecken. Wo? An der Oberfl盲che). And Wittgenstein went even further: 鈥淲hat is hidden . . . is of no interest to us鈥� (Was . . . verborgen ist, interessiert uns nicht). I don鈥檛 take such a drastic view鈥擶ords connect the visible track to the invisible thing that is desired or feared, like a fragile makeshift bridge cast across the void.鈥�
鈥業f Gadda鈥檚 writing is defined by this tension between rational exactitude and frenetic deformation, these being the foundations of every cognitive process, there was in the same period another writer, Robert Musil鈥攁lso an engineer and also with a scientific and philosophical background鈥攚ho expressed the tension between mathematical exactitude and the roughness of human affairs in a completely different manner: fluid, ironic, controlled. A mathematics of single solutions鈥攖hat was Musil鈥檚 dream.鈥�
鈥樷€擫ichtenberg wrote: 鈥淚 believe that a poem about empty space could achieve great sublimity鈥� (Ich glaube, dass ein Gedicht auf den leeren Raum einer gro脽en Erhabenheit f盲hig w盲re). The universe and the void: I鈥檒l return to these two terms, between which swings the aim of literature, and which often seem to mean the same thing.鈥�
鈥楢mong Zhuang Zhou鈥檚 many virtues was his talent for drawing. The king asked him to draw a crab. Zhuang Zhou said he would need five years and a villa with twelve servants. After five years he had not yet begun the drawing. 鈥淚 need another five years,鈥� he said. The king agreed. When the tenth year was up, Zhuang Zhou took his brush and in an instant, with a single flourish, drew a crab, the most perfect crab anyone had ever seen.鈥�
鈥樷€擵al茅ry ruminates on cosmogony as a literary genre rather than as a branch of science, and he produces a brilliant refutation of the idea of a universe, a refutation that is also an affirmation of the mythic power that every image of a universe carries with it. Here, as in Leopardi, the infinite as both attractive and repellent . . . Here too cosmological speculations as literary genre, which Leopardi indulged in with some of his prose 鈥渁pocrypha鈥濃€攕uch as his 鈥淔rammento apocrifo di Stratone da Lampsaco鈥� (鈥淎pocryphal Fragment of Strato of Lampsacus鈥�), on the origin and especially the end of our world, which flattens and empties like the rings of Saturn and disperses until it burns up in the sun.鈥�
鈥樷€擫eopardi, at the age of fifteen, writes an extraordinarily erudite history of astronomy, in which, among other things, he summarises Newton鈥檚 theories. The stargazing that inspired Leopardi鈥檚 loveliest lines was not merely a lyrical motif; when he spoke of the moon, he knew exactly what he was talking about.鈥�
鈥楤orges opens his windows onto the infinite without the slightest busyness, in a style that鈥檚 utterly clear and sober and airy鈥攁s if telling stories through summaries and glimpses results in the most precise and concrete language, the inventiveness of which lies in its rhythmic variety, its syntactic movement, its unexpected and surprising adjectives. With Borges is born a literature raised to its square and at the same time a literature as the extraction of its own square root: a 鈥減otential literature,鈥� as it would be called later in France, but whose heralds may be found in Ficciones鈥�.鈥�
鈥業f Musil鈥檚 Ulrich soon resigns himself to the defeats that a passion for exactitude inevitably entails, Paul Val茅ry鈥檚 Monsieur Teste, another of the century鈥檚 great intellectual characters, never doubts the fact that the human spirit can be fulfilled in the most precise and rigorous way. And if Leopardi, poet of life鈥檚 pain, displays supreme precision in evoking indefinite sensations that cause pleasure, Val茅ry, poet of the mind鈥檚 impassive rigour, displays supreme precision in having his Monsieur Teste confront pain, making him fight against physical suffering by means of an exercise in geometric abstraction.鈥�
鈥榃e live beneath a continuous rain of images; the most powerful media do nothing but turn the world into images and multiply it with the kaleidoscopic play of mirrors鈥攊mages that are largely void of the internal necessity that ought to distinguish every image, as a form and as a meaning, as a force that lays claim to our attention, as a wealth of possible meanings. Much of this cloud of imagery dissolves immediately, like dreams that leave no trace in memory, but a sense of irrelevance and uneasiness remains.鈥�
鈥楾he taste for geometrising composition, whose history in world literature might be traced back to Mallarm茅, is rooted in the opposition, so fundamental to contemporary science, between order and disorder. The universe dissolves into a cloud of heat, it plummets helplessly into a maelstrom of entropy鈥攂ut within this irreversible process there may appear zones of order, portions of the existent that tend toward a shape, privileged points from which one may discern a design, a perspective. The literary work is one of these tiny portions in which the existent crystallises into a shape, acquires a meaning鈥攏ot fixed, not definitive, not hardened into mineral immobility, but alive, like an organism.鈥�