table of contents

04/30/2019

Reflections on the color white

In this monologue professor Robert Harrison reflects on the mysteries of the color white, and its various symbolic associations.

download transcript [vtt]
00:00:00.000
[Music]
00:00:28.800
Greetings to all you white knights of entitled opinions from your host Robert Harrison.
00:00:33.200
I don't know if it's the opulent bloom of a California spring after an unusually wet winter
00:00:39.600
on the west coast or if it's the fact that I'm teaching a course on symbolism this semester.
00:00:44.560
But I have color on my mind these days. The mystery of color in general and of one color in
00:00:52.000
particular white which isn't a color at all technically speaking. I've long been intrigued by whiteness,
00:01:01.200
its associations, its symbolism, its power to blot out and even fill you with dread.
00:01:07.120
This past week I put some thoughts and texts together about the color white for the symbolism
00:01:13.360
seminar and felt that I needed to develop these thoughts further and that's why I've dragged our
00:01:18.640
producer Vitodia into KZSU on a Sunday so I could share them with you or at least those of you
00:01:26.480
who might be interested to reflect with me on this most reflective of colors that we call white.
00:01:32.640
So just so you know we're going to blanch ourselves out in the next half hour to an hour.
00:01:38.320
I can't promise a purification or a glimpse of the end of the tunnel.
00:01:42.960
Just some thoughts from out of our mood on a workshop.
00:01:46.880
(upbeat music)
00:01:49.460
(upbeat music)
00:01:52.040
(upbeat music)
00:02:20.920
- Let's begin with what we know about the physics of color.
00:02:24.760
Color is visible light of a specific wavelength.
00:02:29.360
The color depends on the wavelength.
00:02:31.760
The chromatic spectrum is perceived
00:02:35.200
or as perceived by human eyes
00:02:37.800
range from 700 nanometers at the red end
00:02:41.600
to 400 nanometers at the violet end.
00:02:45.200
That's a very narrow range
00:02:46.600
and we have no idea what the world looks like
00:02:49.200
if the doors of perception were open wide
00:02:54.200
so that we could see far beyond or outside
00:02:57.760
that 300 nanometer range.
00:02:59.960
And I for one do not crave such an expansion of perception.
00:03:04.640
The chromatic wonders of this world
00:03:07.240
are intense and overwhelming enough as it is.
00:03:11.080
Be that as it may.
00:03:12.320
What we're seeing when we see colors is in fact
00:03:16.160
photons that reflect off the surface of objects.
00:03:20.000
In that sense, colors do not belong to objects at all
00:03:24.660
but are what objects fail to absorb.
00:03:28.500
We say that the apple is red but red is not in the apple.
00:03:35.360
Scientifically speaking, we do not see any of the light
00:03:38.560
that is in the apple.
00:03:40.760
On the contrary, we see only the wavelengths of light
00:03:44.200
that bounce off the apple.
00:03:46.040
The reason it appears red to us is because the apple,
00:03:51.280
whatever that object is in itself,
00:03:53.360
has absorbed all the light whose wavelengths
00:03:56.560
do not correspond to the color red
00:03:59.000
when perceived by the human eye.
00:04:00.840
One could say, therefore, that color is unconsumed,
00:04:06.240
unassimilated, unosmosed light.
00:04:09.360
So let me define it in my own terms.
00:04:12.440
Color is an excess of remainder.
00:04:16.600
Color is quite literally an outcast.
00:04:19.160
Some of you may have heard me use the word
00:04:23.160
chlorophilia on this show.
00:04:25.240
It's a term that I coined to refer to our natural love of
00:04:30.400
and even need for plant life and the green that comes with it.
00:04:34.880
All living things with the exception of those
00:04:38.640
in hot vents on the ocean floor depend
00:04:41.160
in one way or another on the chlorophyll molecule.
00:04:44.920
This molecule, which has a magnesium atom in a porphyrin ring,
00:04:51.080
is what enables plants to turn sunlight into sugar,
00:04:54.960
a process otherwise known as photosynthesis.
00:04:58.320
Chlorophyll absorbs energy from the blue
00:05:02.920
and red parts of the solar spectrum,
00:05:05.480
but not from the green middle.
00:05:09.000
And if the molecule were more efficient,
00:05:12.000
in other words, if plants were efficient enough
00:05:14.520
to devour all of the solar spectrum,
00:05:17.520
their leaves would be a non-reflective black instead of green
00:05:22.200
and we would probably be mavrophiles
00:05:24.640
instead of chlorophylls.
00:05:26.240
I find this deeply weird that the red of an apple
00:05:31.320
or the green of plants is in fact an absorbed light.
00:05:35.200
And when we talk about the color,
00:05:37.760
white things get even more involved,
00:05:40.840
an object appears white when it reflects all the wavelengths
00:05:44.320
of the color spectrum.
00:05:45.600
By the same token, an object appears black
00:05:49.600
when it absorbs the maul.
00:05:51.480
That's why people tend to say that white is the presence
00:05:55.160
of all colors and black their absence.
00:05:58.600
And in reality, whatever reality might be
00:06:02.400
outside of our perception of it,
00:06:04.560
neither black nor white is a color properly speaking.
00:06:07.840
Again, I find it deeply weird that sounds are not sensations,
00:06:14.800
but waves that produce the sensation of sound in the inner
00:06:18.680
and outer ears.
00:06:20.680
It makes me wonder what it is that I'm really hearing
00:06:23.440
in the sound of the wind, in the sound of a few leaves,
00:06:27.200
which is the sound of the land that is blowing
00:06:30.000
in the same bare place for the listener.
00:06:34.240
If colors do not inherit in things
00:06:36.440
but are unassimilated wavelengths of light
00:06:38.960
that hit the thing, then why these unsubdueed
00:06:43.000
elations when the forest's bloom, if I may borrow
00:06:46.840
from poet Wallace Stevens?
00:06:49.680
Do the colors of my moods have only an internal reality?
00:06:54.480
Is there in fact an internal reality disconnected
00:06:58.560
from material objects?
00:07:01.040
I don't wanna believe that, or maybe I do wanna believe.
00:07:04.200
I think that, one way or another, the question arises
00:07:08.040
about the deeper symbolic correspondence
00:07:11.200
between the subjectivity of perception
00:07:14.160
and the external objects that touch me.
00:07:17.480
And I mean, touch me directly and immediately and powerfully
00:07:21.200
and that even in gender moods in me.
00:07:24.400
How can an outcast of light and gender in me a mood?
00:07:32.000
What are these gusty emotions on wet roads on autumn nights
00:07:35.720
to call on Stevens once again?
00:07:37.720
Why this certain slant of light on winter afternoons
00:07:43.240
that oppressors like the weight of cathedral tunes?
00:07:46.960
My recent perplexities regarding the color white
00:07:53.840
are connected to a short essay
00:07:55.800
that the Irish poet W. B. Yates wrote about symbolism.
00:08:01.280
I was rereading it for classes last week,
00:08:04.760
and I was struck by a couple of verses that Yates quotes
00:08:07.920
at the beginning of the essay.
00:08:09.360
Yates makes a hyperbolic claim for these verses
00:08:13.760
and he may well be right, at least for those of us
00:08:16.560
who have six-tier more winters on our head like I do.
00:08:20.440
Referring to their author Robert Burns,
00:08:24.200
the Scottish poet Robert Burns,
00:08:27.160
the author of these lines, Yates writes,
00:08:30.320
There are no lines with more melancholy beauty than these by Burns,
00:08:35.040
"The white moon is setting behind the white wave
00:08:38.720
"and time is setting with me, oh."
00:08:41.900
Yates claims that these lines are quintessentially symbolical
00:08:48.120
and that if you take away the whiteness of the moon
00:08:51.640
and the whiteness of the wave whose relations
00:08:54.720
to the setting of time are too subtle for the intellect,
00:08:59.200
you also take away their beauty.
00:09:00.920
He calls the verses symbolical because the way they bring
00:09:05.840
together moon, wave, whiteness, and setting time,
00:09:09.720
and also that last melancholy cry, evoking emotion,
00:09:14.200
which cannot be evoked by any other arrangement
00:09:16.600
of colors and sounds and forms, and I agree with him.
00:09:19.800
But now my perplexity becomes even more extreme
00:09:26.280
when I realize, as I did only yesterday,
00:09:29.720
that Yates actually misquotes Robert Burns lines,
00:09:34.080
Burns wrote, "The wand moon is setting beyond the white wave,
00:09:39.080
"and time is setting with me, oh."
00:09:43.600
So does Yates's claim about the unmatched melancholy beauty
00:09:50.040
and magic symbolism of the line still hold
00:09:53.280
when we consider the original?
00:09:55.680
Again, it's the difference between the white moon
00:10:00.320
is setting behind the white wave and time is setting with me, oh,
00:10:05.560
and the wand moon is setting beyond the white wave
00:10:09.880
and time is setting with me, oh.
00:10:12.320
I don't have an answer to that question,
00:10:16.000
and if time permits, I will read you the Burns poem
00:10:18.560
a little later, but there is no question
00:10:22.280
that something very specific is evoked
00:10:24.840
by a white moon setting behind a white wave,
00:10:28.200
as opposed to a wand moon setting beyond a white wave.
00:10:32.960
Why?
00:10:33.800
Traditional color symbolism regarding the color white
00:10:39.200
can't help us very much here.
00:10:41.520
If you look it up on the internet,
00:10:42.800
you'll find a bunch of statements like the following.
00:10:45.760
I quote, "White is associated with light,
00:10:49.840
"goodness, innocence, purity, and virginity.
00:10:52.040
"It is considered to be the color of perfection.
00:10:54.440
"White means safety, purity, and cleanseiness,
00:10:57.560
"as opposed to black, white usually has positive connotations."
00:11:01.560
White is inherently a positive color.
00:11:05.160
It's associated with purity, virginity, innocence,
00:11:07.680
light, goodness, heaven, safety, brilliance, illumination,
00:11:11.120
understanding cleanseiness, faith, beginnings, spirituality,
00:11:16.160
possibility, humility, sincerity, protection, softness,
00:11:20.600
and again, perfection.
00:11:23.520
It goes on, and these are different entries.
00:11:26.520
It's not just the same entry I'm reading from.
00:11:29.760
The color white is color at its most complete and pure,
00:11:33.560
the color of perfection, the psychological meaning
00:11:35.920
of white is purity, innocence, wholeness, and completion.
00:11:39.520
In color psychology, white is the color of new beginnings
00:11:42.320
of wiping the slate clean, so to speak.
00:11:45.360
It is the blank canvas waiting to be written upon.
00:11:48.920
While white isn't stimulating to the senses,
00:11:52.800
it opens the way for the creation of anything the mind can conceive.
00:11:57.560
White contains an equal balance of all the colors of the spectrum.
00:12:00.880
Its basic feature is equality,
00:12:03.280
implying fairness and impartiality, neutrality,
00:12:06.320
and independence.
00:12:07.480
It is interesting to note that babies come into the world
00:12:11.240
with a perfect balance of white,
00:12:13.880
ready to imprint their lives with all the colors of the spectrum
00:12:18.080
from all their life experiences.
00:12:20.920
Oh boy, that last part, I was not able to grasp what to see,
00:12:27.920
or he mean that babies come into the world
00:12:30.080
with a perfect balance of white.
00:12:32.120
Leaving that aside, let me say that I don't want to dismiss all this
00:12:37.200
as sentimental pap.
00:12:39.400
White sometimes does indeed symbolize purity or perfection or salvation.
00:12:44.600
Dante's Patadizo is drenched in white light, no doubt about it.
00:12:50.280
The souls there appear as pejaline yankafronte,
00:12:56.000
a pearl on a white forehead.
00:12:59.000
And the celestial rose and Dante's imperion is white.
00:13:03.040
But when it comes to white, there is a lot more to it
00:13:06.240
than is dreamt of in our philosophies.
00:13:09.040
For some reason, I can't explain the first thing that comes to my mind
00:13:16.360
when I think of the color of white are two women.
00:13:20.200
Both of them dead who could not be more unlike one another
00:13:23.800
in aspect, demeanor, and life biographies.
00:13:27.000
One of them is Marilyn Monroe.
00:13:30.560
And it's not because she often dressed in white,
00:13:34.480
but because in almost every photo of her,
00:13:36.480
there's a strange luminosity about her that tends towards a vanishing point
00:13:41.240
of radiant whiteness.
00:13:42.720
Does anyone know what Lanugo is?
00:13:48.160
Lanugo.
00:13:49.160
It's a very soft, unpigmented, downy hair that is sometimes found on newborn babies.
00:13:56.160
Usually disappears shortly after birth.
00:13:59.160
And I don't know if this is true, but I was told that very, very exceptionally
00:14:04.160
certain individuals never lose their Lanugo hair,
00:14:08.160
and that Marilyn Monroe was one of them.
00:14:11.160
Maybe that's why in photos of her, even when she's in dark rooms surrounded
00:14:17.160
by a lot of people, the light has a way of gathering about her.
00:14:21.160
If I could, I would show you photos of what I'm talking about,
00:14:25.160
but this is radio and you'll have to imagine that for yourselves.
00:14:28.160
The other woman who immediately comes to my mind when I think of white is Emily Dickinson.
00:14:34.160
Dickinson knew something about that color.
00:14:38.160
I say that not because she is reputed to have worn only white during the last decades of her life.
00:14:44.160
We have really no way of knowing whether that was indeed the case.
00:14:48.160
We know that when Thomas Higgins and met her in 1870, she was dressed in white.
00:14:53.160
And we know that her one surviving dress, now in the Emily Dickinson Museum is white.
00:14:59.160
Plus we know that when she died, she was dressed in white and buried in a white casket.
00:15:05.160
We also have this statement by Maybell Loomis Todd, the secret lover of Emily's brother.
00:15:13.160
She dresses wholly in white and her mind is said to be perfectly wonderful.
00:15:18.160
But we have to take that with a certain degree of suspicion,
00:15:22.160
because Maybell Todd never actually saw Emily Dickinson,
00:15:28.160
despite spending a lot of time in the Dickinson House.
00:15:31.160
Emily would only communicate with her from behind the closed door of her room.
00:15:39.160
So when I say Emily knew a thing or two about the color white,
00:15:42.160
I'm thinking above all about her poems and the inner passions that they bring to expression.
00:15:48.160
So intensely.
00:15:50.160
And I'll give you only one example.
00:15:52.160
It's her poem, "Dare You See a Soul", which reads as follows.
00:15:57.160
"Dare You See a Soul at the White Heat", then crouch within the door.
00:16:04.160
Red is the fire's common tint, but when the vivid ore has sated flames, conditions,
00:16:12.160
it's quivering substance plays without a color, but the light of unenointed plays.
00:16:19.160
Least village boasts its blacksmith whose anvils even din stands symbol for the finer forge
00:16:28.160
that soundless tugs within, refining these impatient oars with hammer and with blaze,
00:16:37.160
until the designated light repudiate the forge."
00:16:41.160
That opening question, "Dare You See a Soul at the White Heat", suggests that there's some risk involved in doing so.
00:16:54.160
In seeing passions burn so intensely that they're like an iron that turns white in the fire, red fire.
00:17:02.160
There's an association of red and white throughout a lot of poems, artworks.
00:17:08.160
There's a symbolic correspondence in the deep sense of the term correspondence between red and white.
00:17:17.160
And I may have a word to say about that a little bit later on, but returning of this poem,
00:17:22.160
if we do dare to look at a soul and white heat, we should not come too close, but we should crouch within the door.
00:17:32.160
In other words, we could get seared by this iron that heats up and becomes hotter than the fire itself.
00:17:39.160
When that iron comes out hotter than the fire that heated it, it is white.
00:17:45.160
So she writes, "Without a color but the light of unenointed blaze, unenointed blaze is peculiar."
00:17:55.160
Does that mean that we're talking about the blaze of hellfire?
00:17:59.160
And so far as it's unenointed?
00:18:01.160
It could well be, in any case, it is not an innocent white heat.
00:18:08.160
Every village, she says, has a blacksmith, the least village has a blacksmith, and his activity, it's forging activity.
00:18:17.160
Acts as a metaphor for the spiritual internal process of refining one's souls and passions.
00:18:26.160
Again, she's from the poem whose anvil's even ring stands symbol for the finger forge that soundless tugs within.
00:18:35.160
So this spiritual refining process takes place soundlessly but not painlessly, if only because it requires hammer and ablaze.
00:18:46.160
A long, arduous, and ardent process that continues until the passions themselves, like the iron that becomes hotter than the fire that heats it, over power of what refines and gave rise to them, presumably in lived experience.
00:19:05.160
I have a feeling that what this poem is talking about is the process of making poems, of Emily Dickinson's process of refining the lived experience, pain, hardship, and suffering.
00:19:19.160
And is it any wonder that she would speak to people like Mabel Todd from behind her door where all this was going on?
00:19:28.160
Maybe Mabel Todd is one who really should not have crouched within the door to look at this process from a safe distance.
00:19:41.160
But the question remains is what is this white heat?
00:19:45.160
Well, it could well be the emotional intensity of Dickinson's poetry itself, which comes about through a forging, smelting, refining process that places the poets' emotion into the blast furnaces of the soul where all their impurities are removed.
00:20:06.160
And what we're left with is a white-hot poem like this one, uncontaminated by ornamental language or poetic flourishes, no rhetorical colors, but only pure white expression born of intense, barely tolerable, transfigured pain.
00:20:24.160
That's what the white heat is in my view, pain transfigured.
00:20:28.160
And that's what makes it dangerous to gaze on and why we're told to crouch at the door.
00:20:34.160
In other words, there is nothing innocent or blissful about this process of transfiguration.
00:20:41.160
Now, there's a suggestion here that's present in other poems of hers as well that only through this searing process of passion refinement through hammer and fire as it were, can the soul become pure enough to repudiate the forge as she puts it.
00:20:57.160
That is, leave it behind and rise up to a higher level, perhaps even a redeemed afterlife in heaven.
00:21:07.160
Leaving behind the forge would mean leaving behind all the earthly sources of what feeds the poem and the fire in the poem.
00:21:19.160
But one way or another, there are certainly more to Dickinson's white heat than purity, virginity, innocence, light, goodness, heaven, safety and so forth.
00:21:27.160
It is nourished by and burns with a degree of hardship, pain and much else besides.
00:21:36.160
Stay tuned, more to follow.
00:21:38.160
[Music]
00:22:04.160
As she walks in the room, sent it to dawn, isn't it in once more?
00:22:17.160
As I take all myself and bitterness, I feel realising love for lots of white horses.
00:22:33.160
They would take me away and I tenderness with you.
00:22:44.160
You will send the dawn to me when I follow you through the glory of life, I will scatter all the flow, dismount the way and dead and so.
00:23:08.160
In my thoughts I have been, for the widows I have been fed, another life and so forth.
00:23:21.160
White horses, they would take me away and I tenderness with you.
00:23:35.160
You will send the dawn to me when I follow you through the glory of life.
00:24:01.160
[Music]
00:24:30.160
I would like to say a word about another poet from a very different country, Austria and a different
00:25:00.120
cultural context and time period.
00:25:04.120
I am referring to Gere or Trackel, Austrian poet and don't tell Gere or Trackel that white represents innocence and goodness because few poets have stared more directly into the dark night of western nihilism, the Gere or Trackel and who, when he did stare into those depths, saw what amounted to a white horror and dread.
00:25:29.120
Trackel died from a drug overdose as an enlisted soldier during the First World War at age 27, leaving behind some of the most wondrous expressionist poems of the early 20th century.
00:25:42.120
Here's one called sleep.
00:25:46.120
Not your dark poisons again, white sleep.
00:25:52.120
Dark poisons there, I think, refers to drugs.
00:25:56.120
Trackel was a pharmacist and he self-medicated with various drugs throughout his 20s and factite of a cocaine overdose in the First World War.
00:26:09.120
So not your dark poisons again, white sleep.
00:26:14.120
This fantastically strange garden of trees and deepening twilight fills up with serpents, nightmoths, spiders, bats, approaching stranger.
00:26:27.120
Your abandoned shadow in the red of evening is a dark pirate ship of the salty oceans of confusion.
00:26:36.120
White birds from the outskirts of the night flutter out over the shuttering cities of steel.
00:26:46.120
Here it's the white of nightmare, this white sleep where you have the phantomatic apparitions that haunt our dreams, especially the ones that disturb us the most.
00:26:59.120
Another poem of his, called descent and defeat, has the same sort of valence when it comes to this color white.
00:27:08.120
Over the white fish pond, the wild birds have flown away, and icy wind drifts from our stars at evening.
00:27:17.120
Over our graves, the broken forehead of the night is bending under the oak's we fear in a silverskiff.
00:27:27.120
The white walls of the city are always giving off sound.
00:27:31.120
Under arching thorns, oh my brother, blind minute hands, we are climbing toward midnight.
00:27:43.120
A few verses from another poem, is called the heart.
00:27:46.120
The wild heart grew white in the forest, so that's the third time we see the word wild and white conjoined together.
00:27:54.120
The wild heart grew white in the forest, and to grow white evokes to me a kind of petrification of the turning into the white marble, having seen the Gorgon's head, where Medusa would turn those who dare gaze on her to some kind of statues of salt or of marble.
00:28:18.120
And maybe that's why Dickinson warns us about looking at the white heat that there is some risk of this kind of petrification.
00:28:28.120
Certainly, Truccle did see the Medusa's head in the year, almost year that he spent fighting on the fronts in the First World War, where the heart is wild and it grows white in the forest.
00:28:46.120
Dark anxiety of death as when the gold died in the gray cloud, smoking with blood to which a man listens in wild despair.
00:28:56.120
All your days of nobility buried in that red evening.
00:29:00.120
Again, here we have the red white connection.
00:29:05.120
Out of the dark entrance hall, the golden shape of the young girl steps surrounded by the pale moon, the prince's court of autumn.
00:29:14.120
Black fur trees broken in the night storm, the steep fortress, oh, heart glittering above in the snowy cold.
00:29:25.120
In Truccle, there is no opposition of black and white on the contrary.
00:29:29.120
His poems venture right into that very strange region of what I would call the nocturnal white, or the white nocturn.
00:29:39.120
The white nocturn shows the true face of darkness in his fantomatic abominations.
00:29:44.120
It's like Kurtz's bald head shining white in the unredeemed darkness of the inner station on the Congo River in Conrad's heart of darkness.
00:29:55.120
Conrad says that Kurtz's head was an ivory white.
00:30:00.120
The same color is the ivory that Kurtz and his fellow white men dig up from the ground in the interior of the African continent.
00:30:09.120
It's as if Kurtz were digging into the shadow realm of death itself.
00:30:13.120
The death that would claim him shortly after Marlow takes him away from that infernal inner station.
00:30:22.120
I suppose this is a place to say a brief word about the racial associations of the color white, which has such a long tragic and ongoing history.
00:30:32.120
It would need a whole other show to deal with this topic properly.
00:30:36.120
Here I'll only suggest that white supremacy in its acts and ideologies belongs precisely in this region of the white nocturn, such as refined, in Truccle's expressionistic poetry.
00:30:50.120
The white robes and hoods of the Ku Klux Klan at night are not symbolic of innocence, purity, or goodness, but of a malignant, san
00:31:05.420
There is nothing quite as unsettling as the symbols of white supremacy, where darkness itself takes on a white hue of horror and nightmare.
00:31:15.420
We could call it the blanching of the shadow realm itself.
00:31:21.420
And this, believe it or not, brings me finally to Melville and his visionary authority when it comes to the disquieting even hideous aspects of the color white.
00:31:34.920
No discussion of the associations and symbolism of the color white can dispense with a reference to chapter 42 of Moby Dick entitled The Whiteness of the Whale.
00:31:46.920
Melville is really very eloquent when it comes to the white nocturn. He describes in the chapter I'm going to go through the experience of sailing in the Antarctic seas and what happens when a ship is completely surrounded at night time by a
00:32:04.880
all these white glaciers and mountains and a sea that's reflecting all white.
00:32:10.880
And he says, "Let a sailor be called from his hammock to view his ship sailing through a midnight sea of milky whiteness, as if from encircling headlands, shoals of combed white bears were swimming round him.
00:32:23.880
Then he feels a silent superstitious dread.
00:32:27.880
The shrouded phantom of a whitened water is horrible to him as a real ghost. In vain the lead assures him he is still off-sounding heart and helm they both go down.
00:32:39.880
He never rests until blue water is under him again."
00:32:45.880
So in this chapter 42 the whiteness of the whale, each mile the narrator begins by saying what the white whale was to Ahab has been hinted what at times he was to me as yet remains unsaid.
00:33:00.880
And he goes on to say aside from those most obvious considerations touching Moby Dick which could not be occasionally awakened in any man's soul, some alarm, there was another thought or rather vague, nameless horror concerning him
00:33:13.880
which at times by its intensity completely overpowered all the rest.
00:33:18.880
And yet so mystical and well-nighingeffable was it that I almost despair of putting it in a comprehensible form.
00:33:26.880
It was the whiteness of the whale that above all things appalled me.
00:33:32.880
But how can I hope to explain myself here?
00:33:35.880
And yet in some dim random way explain myself I must else all these chapters might be not.
00:33:44.880
And what follows is an extraordinary catalog of the various divergent symbolic valences of the color white.
00:33:57.880
And he really goes through a series of examples that recall color symbolism quotes that I cited earlier in this show.
00:34:09.880
And he says though in many natural objects whiteness refining Lee enhances beauty and though various nations have in some way recognized a royal eminence in this hue,
00:34:19.880
though besides all this whiteness has been even more significant of gladness though in other mortals sympathies and symbolizing this same hue is made at the emblem of many touching noble things though among the red man, the giving of the white belt and so forth though to the noble you
00:34:37.880
wise the mid winter sacrifice of a sacred white dog was by far the holiest festival though directly from the Latin word for white all Christian priests have derived the name of one part of their sacred vestiture though in the vision of Saint John and finally two pages later all in the same sentence we get the yet.
00:35:00.880
Yet for all these accumulated associations with whatever is sweet and honorable and sublime there yet lurks an elusive something in the inner most idea of this hue which strikes more of panic to the soul than that redness which are frightened blood.
00:35:20.880
Then he goes on to discuss various other examples it seems like there's something so mysterious and indefinable about what he's trying to.
00:35:30.880
Get at in this color white that he cannot get there directly has to go through one example after another he speaks about the albatross he speaks about the white seed of the prairies.
00:35:43.880
Ask why albinos have such a load some quality to most even to their own kith and kin as he says it it's that whiteness which invests him a thing expressed by the name he bears.
00:35:57.880
That even if an albino is as well made as other men and has no deformity yet this mere aspect of all pervading whiteness makes him more strangely hideous than the ugliest abortion and asks again why should this be so.
00:36:15.880
But before he goes about answering it he speaks about other white things like the white squall of the southern seas the white hoods of the gantmurdor.
00:36:25.880
Well the white hoods would be the our equivalent would be the cook up clan with their white hoods and sheets.
00:36:33.880
And he says that there is some common hereditary experience of all mankind that bears witness to the supernatural ism of this hue.
00:36:42.880
The supernatural ism of the color white and he associates it with the one visible quality in the aspect of the dead which most depals the gazer.
00:36:54.880
Namely that marble paler lingering there and here is where white and red have some kind of substantive connection where red is the color of the animating blood of vitality and white is the color of the cadaver which has lost its blood and it's become pallet and pale and.
00:37:20.880
Lifeless.
00:37:24.880
But even that association with the power of death doesn't get to the bottom of what perturbs us about the color.
00:37:30.880
And here I'm going to skip over a number of other examples that ishmael brings into play.
00:37:35.880
The white side marshal the white fryer the white none the white tower of London the white mountains the white sea that exerts such a spectral cast over the fancy.
00:37:47.880
I'm going to skip over all that and go directly to each male's final speculations and revelations in chapter 42.
00:37:55.880
I quote, "Though in many of its aspects this visible world seems formed in love the invisible spheres were formed and frightened."
00:38:06.880
Now before I continue let me mention that if we go back to the science of color and sound that we talked about at the beginning.
00:38:13.880
I believe the invisible spheres here might have something to do with what reality consists in independently of our subjective perception of it.
00:38:22.880
Namely what the apple might be if you take away from it the illusion that it is red or what the plant might be if you remove the green veil from it.
00:38:32.880
There is a visible world that we perceive through human app perception and then there is this invisible sphere which the color white intimates and reminds us of.
00:38:42.880
And that gets us closer to the conclusion of chapter 42 where we get the following reflections from Eastman.
00:38:53.880
But we have not yet solved the incantation of this whiteness and learned why it appeals with such power to the soul and more strange and far more portentious.
00:39:04.880
Why, as we have seen it is at once the most meaningful symbol of spiritual things, nay the very veil of the Christian deity and yet should be as it is the intensifying agent in things the most appalling to mankind.
00:39:22.880
Is it that by its in-definiteness it shadows forth the heartless voids and immensity of the universe and thus stabs us from behind with the thought of annihilation.
00:39:32.880
When beholding the white deaths of the Milky Way or is it that as in essence whiteness is not so much a color as the visible absence of color and at the same time the concrete of all colors.
00:39:46.880
Is it for these reasons that there is such a dumb blankness full of meaning in a wide landscape of snows a colorless all color of atheism from which we shrink.
00:39:59.880
And when we consider that other theory of the natural philosophers that all other earthly hues every stately or lovely emblazoning the sweet tinges of sunset skies and woods yes and the gilded velvets of butterflies and the butterfly cheeks of young girls.
00:40:19.880
All these are but subtle deceits not actually inherent in substances but only laid on from without so that all dayified nature absolutely paints like the harlot whose allurements cover nothing but the journal house within.
00:40:38.880
And when we proceed further and consider that the mystical cosmetic which produces everyone of her hues the great principle of light forever remains white or colorless in itself.
00:40:52.880
And if operating without medium upon matter which touch all objects even tulips and roses with its own blank tinge.
00:41:02.880
pondering all this the pulsed universe lies before us a leper.
00:41:08.880
And like willful travelers in lap land who refuse to wear colored and coloring glasses upon their eyes so the wretched infidel gazes himself blind at the monumental white shroud that wraps all the prospect around him.
00:41:25.880
And of all these things the albino whale was the symbol.
00:41:30.880
Wonder ye then at the fiery hunt?
00:41:35.880
I think Ishmael is onto something essential when he connects the color white here to something in nature.
00:41:41.880
Something about the universe itself.
00:41:44.880
I spoke earlier about this weirdness of a phenomenal world that appears to us in a burst of form sounds and colors but that these appearances do not correspond to the quantum or material nature.
00:41:54.880
Each male suggests something along these lines and is idea of nature's mystical cosmetics as he calls it.
00:42:04.880
It's a cosmetics at veils or covers over the journal house within.
00:42:10.880
Science tells us that underlying the alluring colorful seductive tapestries of the world are sound waves of certain length of light waves of certain milligmichrones that the world in itself if you want to use that Kantian distinction between the phenomenal and the numinal that world in itself is altogether colorless and tasteless and in some ultimate metaphysical sense white in its essence.
00:42:38.880
That whiteness relates to the nullity of a universe that offers us this overwhelmingly beautiful and bewitching spectacle whose story ends in annihilation and what trackal calls the icy winds drifting from our stars at evening.
00:42:57.880
Yet despite this cold absurdity of the cosmos we still can't resist being drawn into it being enchanted by it even when we remove the veils and stare at the blankness of it all.
00:43:09.880
As we've done most of us these last few days who got so fascinated by the first photographic images of a black hole.
00:43:19.880
There's such great wonderman in us that we forget that what we're looking at is the horror of horrors in these images, a remorseless monster at the center of galaxies devouring all light, all energy, all matter that comes within its voracious gravitational vortex.
00:43:38.880
By the way despite their names black holes are among the most luminous phenomena in the universe, the most intense whiteness imaginable gathers at their event horizons as the light of doom stars, panics and surges in its last terrible flares before disappearing into the sinkhole forever.
00:44:01.880
It was far less dramatic and momentous than the black hole photos that were made public a few days ago.
00:44:07.880
Yet this same past week I was struck even more by a different image and different article that I read in the science section of the New York Times, April 9th is the exact date of that article.
00:44:20.880
It was a short piece with a small black and white image about astronomers who have recently discovered a chunk of a former planet orbiting the remains of its now defunct star which has become a smoldering cinder known as a white dwarf.
00:44:40.880
What is a white dwarf? It's when a star depletes its thermonuclear fuel and cannot generate enough heat to avoid gravitational collapse.
00:44:49.880
It's the detritus left behind when a star as large as our sun or slightly larger runs out of energy and shrinks into a dense ember the size of our earth.
00:45:00.880
The universe is littered with these white dwarfs and yes white is the right color for them.
00:45:07.880
If we could look with other eyes and the ones we have we would see such tombstones everywhere in the night sky.
00:45:14.880
For every galaxy out there there are countless by countless stellar graveyors.
00:45:22.880
The reason I was even more struck by this report of a fragment of a former planet orbiting a white dwarf is because we know that neither our sun or our planet will ever descend into the jaws of a black hole.
00:45:36.880
But we'll suffer a fate similar to this white dwarf and its planetesimal.
00:45:41.880
Our sun will go through its death throes in about five or six billion years.
00:45:47.880
And let me mention that in the process of dying stars first puff up into so-called red giants.
00:45:53.880
Here's that connection between red and white again.
00:45:56.880
They're called red giants because before collapsing into white dwarfs stars flare up and burn violently for a short while.
00:46:04.880
And as they do that they envelop and destroy their inner planets.
00:46:09.880
What the astronomers discovered was a fragment of a planet that had partially survived this cremation.
00:46:16.880
And if you look at the accompanying image in the hard copy of the New York Times article it is in fact drenched in white.
00:46:24.880
And what we get in that image is a glimpse of the cosmic future of our planet earth.
00:46:30.880
Because when our sun goes through the process of becoming a red giant before collapsing into a white dwarf, it will incinerate everything inside the orbit of Mars and maybe even the earth.
00:46:42.880
Or maybe the earth is just near or far enough away that it too will be reduced to a planetesimal.
00:46:50.880
One way or another as the New York Times article puts it, I quote, "There is no chance of life on this planet surviving the event."
00:46:59.880
And it's in fact a toss-up whether the physical object now known as earth will persevere or be dragged to its doom in the sun.
00:47:08.880
Whether it perseveres or not, the color of those endays is white.
00:47:14.880
Now five or six billion years from now may not mean all that much to us. It's hard to relate to time scale so infinitely beyond a human lifetime.
00:47:24.880
Yet in concept, metafismically,
00:47:28.880
this universal fate of all things is the dread and horror that Ishmael has in mind when he says,
00:47:35.880
"Of all this the albino whale was the symbol."
00:47:40.880
So it's not to end this show in the desolation of cosmic death that awaits all the universe's stars and all of its planets and that awaits even the universe itself.
00:47:52.880
Let me bring our human mortality back to this earth of ours where our individual passing away means something.
00:47:59.880
If not to the universe, then at least to those who we may love or those who may love us.
00:48:06.880
And here I'd like to return to that Robert Burns poem that WB8 quoted a couple of lines from and that I cited earlier in the show.
00:48:17.880
The Burns poem is also about death yet in this case, it's a human death that finds us proper symbol as a death that matters locally, if not universal.
00:48:29.880
It's about a man out in the cold at night asking his loved one to open the door to him, but by the time she does so, it's too late.
00:48:39.880
The poem is called "Open the Door to Me Oh" from the year 1793, three years before Burns died at the age of 37.
00:48:52.880
"Oh, open the door some pity to show. Oh, open the door to me. Oh."
00:48:59.880
"Though thou hast been false, I'll ever prove true. Oh, open the door to me. Oh."
00:49:07.880
"Cold is the blast upon my pale cheek, but colder thou love for me. Oh."
00:49:13.880
"The frost that freezes the life at my heart is not to my pains from thee. Oh."
00:49:20.880
"The one moon is setting beyond the white wave, and time is setting with me. Oh."
00:49:27.880
"Fals friends, false love, farewell. For more I'll never trouble them. Nor thee. Oh."
00:49:36.880
"She has opened the door, she has opened it wide, she sees the pale corpse on the plain. Oh."
00:49:45.880
"My true love, she cried, and sank down by his side, never to rise again. Oh."
00:49:55.880
This is Robert Harrison for entitled "Openions. Thanks for listening."
00:49:59.880
[Music]
00:50:19.880
[Music]
00:50:43.880
[Music]
00:50:51.880
[Music]
00:51:15.880
[Music]
00:51:39.880
[Music]
00:52:03.880
[Music]
00:52:27.880
[Music]
00:52:51.880
[Music]
00:53:15.880
[Music]
00:53:39.880
[Music]
00:54:03.880
[Music]
00:54:27.880
[Music]
00:54:51.880
[Music]
00:55:01.880
[Music]
00:55:09.880
[Music]
00:55:33.880
[Music]
00:55:57.880
[Music]
00:56:05.880
you