![]() Finally outright contradictions and antagonistic meanings are deployed by the author - which, Empson argues, via Freud, is an indication of a split in the author’s consciousness. In the sixth, irrelevance constitutes the ambiguity and the reader has to make a choice. In the fifth type, there is some confusion that the author has discovered as he went along, and is the result of the author not being able to “hold” the entire work in his head while composing. ![]() In the fourth, alternative meanings combine to confuse interpretation. In the third type, two seemingly unconnected words are given together. In the second type, two meanings merge into one. He begins with words that seem to mean several things at once due to similar sounds. ![]() Empson’s argument underlies the claim that “the mechanisations of ambiguity are among its very roots.” The book treats poetry from Chaucer to TS Eliot, but its most famous examples are from the 17th century: Shakespeare ( Macbeth), Donne ( A Valediction Forbidding Mourning) and Herbert ( Sacrifice).Įmpson’s taxonomy of ambiguity moved from simple ambiguity such as double meaning to outright contradictions. The purpose of the “seven types” taxonomy is clarity of thought and not rigidity of classification. Empson, a student of IA Richards, in (1930) promulgates a radically new approach to the language of poetry – to the multiple semantic possibilities of individual words, and to the frequent openness of English syntax to more than one construction. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |