I just finished reading the
Swerve by Greenblatt and do recommend it to those curious about the sources
that informed the emergence of modernism out of and through the activities of
the Renaissance. The whole understanding that we associate with the modern
world is spelled out by Lucretius a century before Christ. I think that he is right to assign a great
weight to this particular piece. Ignored
and misunderstood but still sustained, great fortune made it available through
the efforts of Poggio whose worthy life is resurrected in this story.
Let it be said that the weight of
Western opinion has inexorably trended to almost a blanket acceptence of the
position established two thousand years ago.
It surely should be recognized and his poem studied carefully by all students
sooner rather than later. I add this one
author to the short list that I have encountered later in life that I surely
should have seen far earlier. It was
always a mystery as to why thought shifted so radically and blaming the Church
is a non starter there. Here we
understand that it shifted because of respect for the Lucretius both as a
marvelous writer of Latin and consistent thinker in what was an emerging new
age about to be fueled with the printing press.
Ultimately it is the author’s
position that the sudden distribution of Lucretius caught the wave and spurred
it on in the direction of modernism itself.
The Swerve by Stephen Greenblatt – review
A flawed but dazzling study of the origins of the renaissance
guardian.co.uk, Friday 23
December 2011 22.55 GMT
Searcher for monastic treasures: Poggio Bracciolini. Photograph:
Archive Photos/Getty Images
In the winter of 1417 the papal secretary Poggio Bracciolini made a
great discovery. In an abbey in Germany
he came across a manuscript of a long-lost classical poem, Lucretius's De
Rerum Natura ("On the Nature of the Universe"). This event is
vividly described by the renaissance scholar Stephen
Greenblatt in The Swerve. He sees it as the origin of the
renaissance and, in effect, of modernity.
What was the poem that Poggio rediscovered? Lucretius was a passionate
follower of the Greek philosopher Epicurus. He believed that the gods did not
concern themselves with mortal affairs and did not create the universe, which
was composed of minuscule particles. These atoms move perpetually and randomly
through a void. As they do so they "swerve" from a direct course, and
may strike against each other. Life is one result of this swerve, as atoms
assemble themselves into forms that enable us to see and breathe. At some point
our atoms will break free and move on in their eternal course through the void.
That meant there was no afterlife, no eternal reward for virtue, and no
perpetual punishment for vice. As a result human beings should not fear death.
For the short period in which we live and feel desire, pleasure is the only end
we should seek. Nothing else matters.
Lucretius created from these philosophical beliefs a poem in the same
league as Dante'sDivine
Comedy and Milton's Paradise
Lost. De Rerum Natura contains passionate arguments against the fear
of death, as well as some amazing descriptions. Lucretius describes an entirely
god-free origin of life, in which living creatures simply heave themselves from
the earth, not through the actions of a creator, but as a result of the vital
forces of the universe.
It's not hard to imagine why Lucretius was unpopular in the early
middle ages. Other pagan philosophers, including Plato and Aristotle, allowed
for a creator. Their ethical systems could, with some whittling and squeezing,
be fitted to Christian doctrine. Epicureanism, however, simply would not fit.
Although it was in fact an austere philosophy in which "pleasure"
meant freedom from pain and fear rather than self-indulgence, epicureanism
became identified among most Christian writers with swinish self-indulgence. St Jerome even claimed in
the fourth century that Lucretius (about whose life we know almost nothing)
went mad with love, and then killed himself. Eventually, but unsurprisingly,
the great medieval monasteries that preserved classical texts by patient
copying of manuscripts came to neglect him.
Most of The Swerve is devoted to this story of loss and
retrieval. It begins with a crisis in the Catholic church and in the career of
Poggio Bracciolini, who was personal secretary to John XXIII. In the early 15th
century there were two popes, one at Rome and
the other at Avignon .
In 1414 a council was held at Constance in Germany to resolve the dispute. It
led to the fall of John XXIII from power. With the end of his master's career,
Poggio also lost his job. He set off to scour German monasteries for the
classical texts that he was expert at finding and copying. And there he found
his Lucretius, which he had copied and sent to his friend Niccolò Niccoli at Florence . Niccoli kept
the manuscript for 12 years, and then finally allowed further copies to be
produced. From these copies Lucretius found his way into print. With this
spread of secularist and atomist thought, Greenblatt argues, the renaissance
began.
The story is told with all Greenblatt's style and panache. He brings
the silent labours of a medieval scriptorium to life by describing the
elaborate sign-language that scribes used to indicate which manuscript they
needed to consult: a scribe called for a particularly offensive pagan text such
as Lucretius by putting two fingers in his mouth "as if he were
gagging". In order to show how the Roman elite valued epicureanism he
takes us beneath the ash at Herculaneum into the so-called "House of the
Papyri", where fragments of Lucretius and other epicurean writers have
been discovered, and uses that setting to evoke the richness of Roman
philosophical life. He conveys the passion for texts and for the classical past
that drew humanists such as Poggio to scour monastic libraries because he
himself shares their fascination with retrieval and discovery.
But is it right to identify the recovery of Lucretius with the
beginning of the renaissance? When Poggio found De Rerum Natura,
Greenblatt argues, he discovered "a book that would help in time to
dismantle his entire world" by bringing a concern for worldly pleasure to
the moral life. Greenblatt traces Lucretius's atomism into Galileo's astronomy
and Newton 's
physics. He follows "the swerve" of Lucretius's atoms briefly into
the works of Shakespeare and Montaigne. He even sees the focus on pleasure in the Utopia of the devout Catholic Sir Thomas More as resulting
from Lucretius. Poggio's discovery, he argues, brought about a liberation for
scientific and religious thought that spread throughout Europe .
The story told by the book – epicureanism flourished at Rome , was lost, and then
was suddenly rediscovered and transformed the world – reflects the historical
outlook of the humanists themselves. It was common for 14th and 15th-century
scholars to claim that there was a destruction of classical learning in the
middle ages, or, as Greenblatt calls it, "a Great Vanishing", and
that they were bringing the classical past back to life. As Francesco Barbaro
wrote to Poggio: "You have revived so many illustrious men and such wise
men, who were dead from eternity."
Was this story really true? It more or less works for De Rerum
Natura, which was indeed "lost" (or at least not often recopied
between the 13th and 15th centuries) and then found on a particular day by an
individual humanist. But the story that the renaissance suddenly began with a
great rediscovery of the pagan past does not work so well in relation to other
classical authors. Virgil, Ovid and Aristotle were more or less continuously
read from antiquity until the age of print. In many cases humanists found more
reliable manuscripts, and they sometimes discovered whole texts. But they did
not simply end the "ignorance" of the dark ages. Indeed they tended
to exaggerate that ignorance to emphasise their own novelty.
The reason for this is obvious. To have a "renaissance" or
rebirth of classical learning, you have to imagine that it died. As well as
sharing the humanists' passion for antiquity, Greenblatt shares their prejudice
against medieval Christianity, which he portrays with the vividness but also
the crudity of a cartoon. "If Lucretius offered a moralised and purified
version of the Roman pleasure principle, Christianity offered a moralised and
purified version of the Roman pain principle," Greenblatt declares. His
descriptions of medieval monasticism emphasise the strict discipline of
monastic orders, the erasure of personal identity among scribes and the
mortification of the flesh. Greenblatt's version of the middle ages is more or
less exactly that of the humanists, in which characterless monks and
self-flagellating nuns rejoice in the savage discipline of the church. From
this they needed Lucretius to set them free.
Centuries before the rediscovery of Lucretius many Christians
incorporated philosophical accounts of pleasure and love from the classical
philosophers into their theology. Aquinas and Dante, who play little part in
Greenblatt's description of medieval Christianity, found room for both love and
pleasure in their philosophies. Those "classical" currents within
Catholic thought are a much more likely source than Lucretius for Thomas More's
descriptions of the rational pleasures enjoyed by his Utopians. They are among
the many strands of thought that lie behind "renaissance" thinking, and
indeed behind humanism too.
Greenblatt's story of the unleashing of the pleasure principle on the
European world after the discovery of Lucretius conveys his own passion for
discovery, and displays his brilliance as a storyteller. The
Swerve is, though, a dazzling retelling of the old humanist myth of the
heroic liberation of classical learning from centuries of monastic darkness.
The light of Rome
fades into gloom, sheep graze in the Forum; then the humanists rebel against
the orthodoxies of the church, bring about a great recovery of classical texts
and generate a new intellectual dawn. This book makes that story into a great
read, but it cannot make it entirely true.
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