While I can sympathize with the idea that an essayist may sometimes prove self-indulgent, I am incline to argue that such potentially comprehensive examination is inherent to the genre; it is to be expected, and while personal preferences certainly contribute to the enjoyment of an essay, lengthy discourse and even redundancy does not negate the validity of an essay, nor the skill of the essayist. If given the same topic, an essayist and an academic writer will approach the deconstruction of the subject completely differently, from an informal and a formal view respectively. Should they each produce a produce a paper 15 pages long, eyebrows might be raised that the academic's paper was not, in fact, lengthier, while the essayist (according, apparently, to some in our class) may be regarded as long-winded and perhaps egocentric.
Since we have agreed that an essay is something personal and conversational, it would seem natural that essays can, and will, be as long as the essayist cares to continue talking about a thing. As Arthur Benson notes in his The Art of the Essayist,
The essay is the reverie, the frame of mind in which a man says,...'Says I to myself, says I.'
Frankly, though an essayist should aspire to write for an audience of some kind, why shouldn't he write on and on about a meditation as long as he has something new to say? OF course we would hope that a good essayist would show some signs of self-restraint, lest his reflection become an obvious platform merely to hear his own thoughts, but if he continues to discover new and interesting facets of a subject, why restrict him from continued enlightenment for the sake of a few less pages? Benson also wrote that
the appeal of the essayist to the world at large will depend upon the extent to which he experiences some common emotion, sees it in all its bearings, catches the salient features of the scene, and records it in vivid and impressive speech.
In order to do so, a few extra paragraphs may be required--and so what? All too often I think we demand a kind of instant gratification, rather than letting ourselves meander through the thoughts of someone else, happy to take in all the twists and turns and contemplations that may lead to deeper meaning.
The good essayist is the man who makes the reader say: 'Well, I have often thought all those things, but I never discerned before any connection between them, nor got so far as to put them into words.'
I don't know about anyone else, but I'm sure my unbridled thoughts are not so neatly conveyed as even a lengthy essay may present, and I am more than happy to let an essayist talk on, as long as he has something valuable to say.
No comments:
Post a Comment