Ron Price
Mr RonPrice
THE BIRTH OF SUBLIMITY
Beautiful works of art serve our underlying purposes in both cognition and morality in a way uniquely characterized by the freedom of the imagination. When it comes to the sublime in art there always lurks the abyss of the unsayable, the larger sea of the ungraspable and great discontinuities between what can’t be expressed and what can. With the sublime there also exists a tension between reason and irrationality; the stick of fear and submission, of a chastening and humility, complementing the carrot of consolation, a celebration of what is essential to human nature and a movement of the mind within and from sublimity’s complex intensity, in contrast to a restful, simple feeling aroused in the contemplation of the beautiful. -Ron Price with thanks to Paul Guyer, Kant and the Experience of Freedom: Essays on Aesthetics and Morality, Cambridge UP, 1993.
This poem was written after reading several essays on aesthetics and the concepts of the sublime and the beautiful. At the back of my mind, as I wrote this poem, I had the image of the Baha’i gardens on Mt Carmel and the developments that have taken place there during the last half century. -Ron Price, 8:30 pm, Christmas Day, 1996.
The disposition of my soul is evoked
by what engages my reflective faculty,
here, making me feel sublimity, a power
that can override nature itself, a power
in my own mind that seems to drift beyond
imagination’s limitless boundaries, found
in my own autonomy, a ground for true
noble pride and humility, strengthening
the bonds of society in the realm of feelings,
of taste and of aesthetic integrity, expressed
here in nameless and inexplicable elegancies
which appeal, if I am successful, wholly
to your fancy, the enchantress of your soul,
and to my own soul where it1 is born
from depths of being.
Ron Price
25 December 1996
1 the power of sublimity
Beautiful works of art serve our underlying purposes in both cognition and morality in a way uniquely characterized by the freedom of the imagination. When it comes to the sublime in art there always lurks the abyss of the unsayable, the larger sea of the ungraspable and great discontinuities between what can’t be expressed and what can. With the sublime there also exists a tension between reason and irrationality; the stick of fear and submission, of a chastening and humility, complementing the carrot of consolation, a celebration of what is essential to human nature and a movement of the mind within and from sublimity’s complex intensity, in contrast to a restful, simple feeling aroused in the contemplation of the beautiful. -Ron Price with thanks to Paul Guyer, Kant and the Experience of Freedom: Essays on Aesthetics and Morality, Cambridge UP, 1993.
This poem was written after reading several essays on aesthetics and the concepts of the sublime and the beautiful. At the back of my mind, as I wrote this poem, I had the image of the Baha’i gardens on Mt Carmel and the developments that have taken place there during the last half century. -Ron Price, 8:30 pm, Christmas Day, 1996.
The disposition of my soul is evoked
by what engages my reflective faculty,
here, making me feel sublimity, a power
that can override nature itself, a power
in my own mind that seems to drift beyond
imagination’s limitless boundaries, found
in my own autonomy, a ground for true
noble pride and humility, strengthening
the bonds of society in the realm of feelings,
of taste and of aesthetic integrity, expressed
here in nameless and inexplicable elegancies
which appeal, if I am successful, wholly
to your fancy, the enchantress of your soul,
and to my own soul where it1 is born
from depths of being.
Ron Price
25 December 1996
1 the power of sublimity