"Poetry brings all possible experience to the same degree: a degree in the consciousness beyond which the consciousness itself cannot go"
About this Quote
Poetry, for Laura Riding, is less a decorative art than a stress test for consciousness. She frames it as an apparatus that levels experience: grief and weather, desire and geometry, all brought to "the same degree" not because they are equal in content, but because the poem forces them through a single, unforgiving medium - attention. That phrase "degree in the consciousness" is doing double duty: it suggests both a measurement (how far awareness can be intensified) and an academic credential (poetry as the highest training consciousness can earn). Riding is staking out a maximalist claim: poetry is where experience is fully metabolized into thought.
The subtext is a refusal of the usual hierarchy of experiences. We treat some events as meaningful and others as noise; poetry, she implies, abolishes that convenience. The poem doesn't privilege what happened so much as how deeply it can be apprehended. That leveling can sound democratic, even humane, but Riding's edge is stricter: consciousness has a ceiling, and poetry is the practice of touching it. "Beyond which the consciousness itself cannot go" reads like a warning to mystics and ideologues alike. No transcendence, no escape hatch - just the hard limit of what can be known and named.
Context matters: Riding was a modernist who grew increasingly suspicious of poetic "effects" and romantic vagueness, pursuing instead a kind of ethical exactitude in language. This line belongs to that campaign. It's not praising poetry's beauty; it's justifying poetry's necessity as the most rigorous form of awareness we have.
The subtext is a refusal of the usual hierarchy of experiences. We treat some events as meaningful and others as noise; poetry, she implies, abolishes that convenience. The poem doesn't privilege what happened so much as how deeply it can be apprehended. That leveling can sound democratic, even humane, but Riding's edge is stricter: consciousness has a ceiling, and poetry is the practice of touching it. "Beyond which the consciousness itself cannot go" reads like a warning to mystics and ideologues alike. No transcendence, no escape hatch - just the hard limit of what can be known and named.
Context matters: Riding was a modernist who grew increasingly suspicious of poetic "effects" and romantic vagueness, pursuing instead a kind of ethical exactitude in language. This line belongs to that campaign. It's not praising poetry's beauty; it's justifying poetry's necessity as the most rigorous form of awareness we have.
Quote Details
| Topic | Poetry |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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