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Form or Mere Illusion?* - the Annual of Urdu Studies

Form or Mere Illusion?* - the Annual of Urdu Studies

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6 • The <strong>Annual</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Urdu</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>, No. 25none<strong>the</strong>less inadequate. Man may well be a universe unto himself, butthis universe keeps colliding with o<strong>the</strong>r similar universes every instant.Well, <strong>the</strong> new artist is not unaware <strong>of</strong> this collision, <strong>or</strong> <strong>the</strong> complexitiesthat come in its wake. Indeed, he knows <strong>the</strong>m intensely and suffers tragicallyfrom <strong>the</strong> knowledgeóall <strong>of</strong> which is well beyond Marx and Engels,who, after all, are pamphleteers. If <strong>the</strong> literary ref<strong>or</strong>mer Irving Babbitt(1865–1933) had felt <strong>the</strong> crushing intensity <strong>of</strong> such knowledge f<strong>or</strong> even tenminutes, he would have started to vomit blood. It does not cost much toexpound on good and evil from <strong>the</strong> cozy c<strong>or</strong>rid<strong>or</strong>s <strong>of</strong> Harvard.Now, count all <strong>the</strong> things Baudelaire cannot love: first <strong>of</strong> all, ìGod,îbut do not overlook his scathing jibes about <strong>the</strong> materialism, rationalism,and a<strong>the</strong>ism <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> industrial age. When he says that he hates God, <strong>the</strong>intended <strong>of</strong>fenders are <strong>the</strong> god and religion <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> capitalist society thatexploits <strong>the</strong>m to promote its own interests. Next comes ìcountry.î Baudelaireis fed up with that too, because country is that strange place where<strong>or</strong>dinary bread is called ìcake,î a piece <strong>of</strong> which drives men to kill oneano<strong>the</strong>r. Such men know nothing <strong>of</strong> love, whe<strong>the</strong>r <strong>of</strong> oneís mo<strong>the</strong>r, fa<strong>the</strong>r,bro<strong>the</strong>r, sister, <strong>or</strong> friends, because <strong>the</strong> love <strong>of</strong> money has poisonedeven <strong>the</strong> mainsprings <strong>of</strong> life, leaving <strong>the</strong>m without <strong>the</strong>ir f<strong>or</strong>mer elixir.Baudelaire, <strong>of</strong> course, cannot love money, especially money acquireddishonestly. The fact is, <strong>the</strong> pursuit <strong>of</strong> money has gripped society so relentlesslythat it craves nothing else. Every o<strong>the</strong>r ideal has lost its meaning,has actually become downright dangerous. Such a society, especiallya Marxist society, looks upon <strong>the</strong> artist as some strange, wild creature thatposes a threat to <strong>the</strong> social <strong>or</strong>der. Acc<strong>or</strong>ding to Baudelaire, if some poetasked f<strong>or</strong> a couple <strong>of</strong> bourgeois to tend his stable, peopleís jaws woulddrop in wonder, h<strong>or</strong>r<strong>or</strong> and wrath; conversely, if a bourgeois asked f<strong>or</strong> aplate <strong>of</strong> poet-meat shish kabobs, no one would so much as bat an eyelidin surprise, in fact this would be considered something quite appropriate.(And come to think <strong>of</strong> it, our Progressives would not even balk at eating apoet alive.) Why, as Baudelaire says in one <strong>of</strong> his poems, even a poetísmo<strong>the</strong>r, let alone anyone else, curses him f<strong>or</strong> having been b<strong>or</strong>n from herwomb. Ano<strong>the</strong>r basic relationship, sex and love, has also been poisonedf<strong>or</strong> <strong>the</strong> artist by <strong>the</strong> unrestrained w<strong>or</strong>ship <strong>of</strong> Mammon. In one poemBaudelaire dreams <strong>of</strong> being surrounded by a crowd <strong>of</strong> filthy, grubby,fiendish men who are poking fun at him while <strong>the</strong>ir swee<strong>the</strong>art is clingingto <strong>the</strong>m in an intimate embrace; she is kissing <strong>the</strong>m and having sex with<strong>the</strong>m just to spite him. Ano<strong>the</strong>r example <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> new poetís sexual relations:After much pining and waiting, Tristan C<strong>or</strong>bière (1845–1875) spots hisladylove (likely some restaurant waitress) in <strong>the</strong> street one day. A beamingC<strong>or</strong>bière sets out behind her looking so disheveled that she glances

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