Emma and the Romantic Imagination
Jane Austen's Emma and the Romantic Imagination "To see a world in a grain of sand And a heaven in a wild flower Hold infinity in the palm of your hand And eternity in an hour." -William Blake, 'Auguries of Innocence' Imagination, to the people of the eighteenth century of whom William Blake and Jane Austen are but two, involves the twisting of the relationship between fantasy and reality to arrive at a fantastical point at which a world can be extrapolated from a single grain of sand, and all the time that has been and ever will be can be compressed into the space of an hour. What is proposed by Blake is clearly ludicrous-it runs against the very tide of reason and sense-and yet the picture that the imagination paints of his verse inspires awe. The human imagination supplies the emotional undercurrents that allows us to see the next wild flower we pass on the side of the road in an entirely different and amazing light. In Austen's Emma, the imagination is less strenuously taxed because her story of sensibility is more easily enhanced by the imagination, more easily given life than Blake's abstract vision of the great in the small because Emma is more aesthetically realistic. However, both rely on the fact that "[t]he corresponden
Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1989 (1725). "The soul might have the capacity to take in the 'world' or the 'atom' if it weren't for the body's limitations getting in the way," (Joseph Addison, 1712). It is this that allows Emma to "read between the lines" of Mr. Woodhouse's inability to clear his head leads him to imagine problems with the food and health of other people. sensibility," (Dugald Stewart, 1792). Hume suggests that, in order to imagine truly and effectively, the mind must be as clear as possible.
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