5517355
9780595418596
In his 1896 short story, The Figure in the Carpet,” James sets forth a riddle for his critical readers as he approaches the major phase in his career. He imagines a fictional novelist, Hugh Vereker, who tantalizes his critics with the idea of a single thread, a design woven throughout all of his major works, hidden in plain sight. The design, Vereker says, is as obvious as a foot stuck in a shoe” but the distinguished novelist is convinced no one will ever see it. One critic, Corvick, however, during a trip to India, has an astonishing flash of revelation: he sees the figure and the discovery is immense.” When Corvick returns and shares his epiphany with Vereker, the novelist assures him that his discovery is precisely accurate; there is not a single, wrong note.” But Corvick dies in a car crash before he can write his definitive book on Vereker’s secret design. My book will show the reader that there is indeed a figure in the carpet” in all of the major works of Henry James himself. The pattern is fully manifested inThe Turn of the Screwin 1897 and remains the consistent thread all the way through the Master’s final completed novel,The Golden Bowl, in 1904. My own discovery of the figure in the carpet” transpired in a succession of revelations over the thirty years it took me to complete this book. I began writing about the relation of writing to painting and how James translates structural aspects of the silent art of painting into prose. James borrows both silence and simultaneity from the painter, his brother of the brush,” and experiments with their narrative equivalents. I saw with increasingly clarity that James’ admiration of the powers of painting led him into depicting non-verbal aspects of consciousness in language. Finally I saw the whole system lock into place; everything fit. The figure in the carpet was revealed as visible silence. James brings the reader into the full consciousness of his character by taking us into the silent radiation of the visible. As readers we experience the silence before language, the silence between words, and the silence after language. In this book I will show my reader how the figure in the carpet” operates as the controlling design in every square inch of text” in each of James’ most famous novels and tales.Johnson, Lee is the author of 'Finding the Figure in the Carpet: Vision and Silence in the Works of Henry James', published 2006 under ISBN 9780595418596 and ISBN 0595418597.
[read more]