the novelist wants to describe. Yet that shadow allows the reader to “sense” the nature of the feeling. In language, feelings and thoughts descend into the “common domain,” but the novelist “strives to restore, by adding detail to detail, their original and living individuality.”23 Similarly, Bergson contemplates the nature of the work of people of letters in The Two Sources of Morality and Religion. He speaks concretely about two possible forms of literary activity. On one hand, in their work writers can combine words – which, as such, are already generally understandable, socially given and thus express general facts – in new ways. They may even “reshape”24 words before they are used in new combinations. In that case, however, they remain at the level of the intellectual combination of what is given in general consciousness as the sign of a shared idea, as the mere expression of a “social segment of reality.”25 On the other hand, they might proceed in a more ambitious manner. They might attempt to express something purely individual, a unique emotion they could only have felt “fully once in [their] lifetime.”26 Such an emotion would manifest itself in fragments words would be unable to correspond to. In such a case, writers must therefore “do violence to words” and “strain”27 the fragments of the unique emotion. It is only with the help of such use of words, which is the nature of word games, that they can attempt to express a unique emotion. Whitehead also points out in Symbolism that the relationship he describes between things and words is merely evidence of a more general reality – the symbolic reference between causal efficacy, and presentational immediacy on one side, and a further symbolic transfer by means of the two perceptual modes mentioned above into a conceptualized causality on the other. What is at issue, therefore, is the relationship between the individual reality of things along with their emotional efficacy, and a generalized or abstracted reality – i.e., a reality expressible in words and relevant to an activity or action. The general difference between the presentational immediacy and causal continuity of conceptually grasped things and a conceptualized causality is the reflective moment of all art. Whitehead points out that all art tends to accumulate emotional
23 Bergson, Time and Free Will, 164. 24 Henri Bergson, The Two Sources of Morality and Religion (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame, 2002), 253. 25 Bergson, The Two Sources of Morality and Religion, 254. 26 Bergson, The Two Sources of Morality and Religion, 253. 27 Bergson, The Two Sources of Morality and Religion, 254.
98 Ukázka elektronické knihy, UID: KOS291029