Professional Documents
Culture Documents
A Lover's
Discourse
FRAGMENTS
dol
dOl HILL AND WANG
A division of Farmr,
Farrar, Smllls
Straus and
ami Giroux
New York
Translation copyright C
TWlIs/wioll 1978 by Farrar,
Ftlmlr, Straus and Giroux,
Strarls /Imf Giroux, Inc.
hrc,
Originally published in French lIS
Origi-rolly as Fragments d 'un discours
Fm gments d'un di scou rs amoureux,
amourcux,
C
Editions
Editio,rs du Seuil 1977
All rights reserved
righls rtstn'ed
Published
1'lIblislztd in Canada by HarperCollinsCanadaLtd
HarfH',CoIlinsCanadaLtd
Printed in the United States of America
I'rilt/ed ill Amfr/ca
Dtsigfll'd by Charles E.
Designed E. Skaggs
First published in the
f"irst lIublisht'd tht United States in 1978 by
Unlltd Stales
Hill
HiII and
llltd Wang,
Wang. a(1 division
dil,jsiQlI of Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Fa"",, SlrallS
Twenty-second printing, 2001
TWl'1Ity-JUQnd
Library
Li brary of Co ngress Cataloging in Publication
Congress J'ublil;ation Data
Barthes,
Ilarthe;;, Roland.
A lover's
lo\,er's discourse.
Translation
Transla tion of Fragments
Fra8JTIents d'un
d'\ln discours
diseours amoureux.
amOUreUll.
1. French
I. Frenc h language- Terms and phrases.
Ilhl"ll 5CS.
2. Love- Terminology.
l o\e- TuminoJoty.
l. Titl
L Title.e.
PC2440.B3613
IC2440. BJ61J 19781918 808 78-7794
CONTENTS
The
T he necessity
n("l;('ssi l y . . . drallle
(Irall/(' /I dra
drama ma 93 \J3
How Ihis this book is conSlrw;led
constructed 3 ecorche /I flayed
i.o,c},; flared 95 9S
s'ab/m er I/ to be cngul,fcd
S'(lbimtr e ngulJed 10 ecrire I/ to write 97
cain-
absence I/ absence
IIbSf'''Ct, a bse nce 13 lJ erran ce /I errantry 101
errllllC,' 10 1
adorable /I adorable 18
oilorabl;' lrt' illf(' I/ embrace
rerreinte cmbr<lce 104 10",
affirmation I/ affirmation 22
flfJirll1(uiQII exil I/ exile
('xii c:cile 106
alteration I/ allcralion
ai/ha/ion alteration 25 jachclIx /I irkso me I110
,lic/i"lI.r 10
angoisse I/ anllicl),
nngoiss(' anxiety 29 jading I/ fade-out
Im/ill/: fade -out 11 112 2
annlllation I/ :Innulmcnt
(1/1",,/(111011 a nnulment 31 31 ja lltes I/ fault
/UII/('S faultss 11 1177
askesis 3J
fll'J..csis 33 Nt('
jhe I/ festivity
festh'ity IIll) 19
1011
JO Il I
alOpos
atopos 34
allente
11I1{'lI "
l r" I/ waiting
wait ing 37 31
/ mad
gene /I emba
J.:hll'
Gradiva 124
embarrass
120
rrass ment 122
cacher I/ to hide 41
("(le/UT Gr(ltiiWl 12",
cases / pigeonholed 45
('(lsi's 45 habil /I habiliment 12
habit 1277
catastroph
cmas(rophre 48 identification
illt'llti{icUlioll I/ id e ntifica ti o n 129
identification
6 , ("oll5('r;'I' I/ to circumscribe
circonscrire ci rcum scribe 50 image /I ima
ill/ag, image ge 132
coellr /I he
cot'ur a rt 52
heart il1conl1aissab
ill{"oll,wi.<,mb/" le /I unknowab le 134 13",
co mblem ent I/ fulfillment
comb/rllll'lIl fulfillmcnt S4 54 induction /I indu
imh,crioll ction 136
induction
compassion
rompossiOIl / compassion compassio n 57 illjormat('
'1IIOrll/(llllIr ur /I info rme r 138
informer 138
comprendre / 10
comprrllllrr to understa
un(ierstaml nd 59 insupportable
infllpporlllb/t' /I unbea rable 140
unbe:rrablc 140
condllite // behavior 62
("Om/uitr. issues
;.1$111'.' /I outcomes 142
conn;,'ence
("OI"' i ....,,("1' I/ con ni vance 6S
nh'ance 65 ja lousie /I jealousy
jll/omil' j..>alousy 144
COIl /act s I/ contacts
con tacts 67 jc-t'-aillll' /I I-love-yo
je-t'-aime I-Iove-)oll u 14 7
147
contingences
,'olllirr;:I' IICf'S /I contin ge nc ies 69
conlinJ,!cncics langueur
11II1)://{'IIf /I la nguo
l:tn gu<lrr 155 15S
corps /I bod
('orps bodyy 7 1J /,-//,."
I,, /lre /I letter
kl1er 157 I
declara tion /I decl
,I.'clara/ioll arat io n 73
declaralion loquela
loq//"'a 160 160
dedicace
dMican' / dedica tio tionn 75 magie /I m
11If1):i/' ag ic 163
magic 163
dh
d"mn ons
Olu / de mon s 80
d<'nlons 80 IIIOIU{f('//I" /I m o nstrous
11/0nstreux 165
165
depl'ndance
d"pt'IlI/mrcf' /I depe nd e ncy
dependen cy 82 mutism
/11111;''''1'e /I silence
\ilencc 167 161
depense
d Fpr'Uf" /I ex penditure 84
(')l:penuilurc nuages
!/IUH!/' S /I clo ud s 169
clouds Ill'}
,dhhdite
dirill/ili /I di sreality
srcalilY 87 fi7 nuit
IIl1it I/ ni ght 171
ni!!hl 171
objets I/ objects 173
objelS scenee / scene
scell 204
obscene I/ obs!;ene
vbscelle obscene 175 [75 seul I/ alone 210
Jelll 2 10
pleurer I/ crying 180
!,h'lIrer [80 signes /I signs
Jiglles sig ns 214
2 [4
potin I/ gossip 183
porill l'lI ir I/ remembrance 216
souvenir
SouI'
uoi I/ why 186
pOllrqlloi
poU/'q [86 suicide /I suicide 218
Sllicidl' 2 [8
I'Qvissem enl I/ rav
m";SSen1('1I1 ishm ent
ravishment 188 rei I/ thus 220
Id
regrelle I/ regretted
regrelte regrette d 195[95 lendrel'se
lendresse /I tenderness 224
/lIre I/ encounter 197
renconlre
rrllCO unionll /I union 226
I1l1io 226
relen lissem enl I/ reverberation
retelllisseml'1II 200 verite /I truth 229
virile 229
rheil I/ waking 203
reveil vouloir-saisir I/ will-to-possess
will- ta-possess 232
A LOVER'S DISCOURSE
1J Figures
Dis-cursus-originaIly the action of running here and
Dis-wrsus-originally
comings and goings, measures taken, "plots and
there, earnings
plans": the lover, in fact, cannot keep his mind from
racing, taking new measures and plotting against himself.
His discourse exists only in outbursts of language, which
occur at the whim of trivial, of aleatory circumstances.
circumstances.
These fragments of discourse can be called figures
figures.. The
word is to be understood,
understood , not in its rhetorical sense, but
rather in its gymnastic or choreographic acceptation; in
4
short, in the Greek meaning: ux,j!J. is not the "schema,"
but, in a much livelier way, the body's gesture caught in
action and not contemplated in repose repose:: the body of
athletes,
athletes, orators, statues:
statues : what in the strai ning body can
straining
be immobilized. So $0 it is with the lover at grips with his
figures: he struggles in a kind of lunatic sport, sport, he spends
himself, like an athlete; he ""phrases,"
phrases," like an orator; he is
caught, stuffed into
inlO a role, like a statue.
statue. The figure is the
lover at work.
Figures take shape insofar as we wc can recognize, in pass-
discourse, something that has been read, heard, felt.
ing discourse,
The figure is outlined (like a sign) and memorable (like
an image or a tale) tale),. A figure is established if at least
someone can say: "That's so true! I recognize that scene
of language." For certain operations of their art,
o/language." art , linguists
make use of a vague entity which they call linguistic feel- feel
ing; in oorder
rder to constit
constitute
ute figures, we require neither more
nor less than this guide: amorous feeling.
Ultimately it is unimportant whether the text's text"s disper-
sion is rich here and poor there; there are nodes, blanks,
many figures break off short; some, being hypostases of
the whole of the lover's
love r's discourse, have just the rarity-
ra rity-
the poverty-of essences : What is to be said of Languor,
poverty--of essences:
of the Image, of the Love Letter, since it is the whole of
the lover's discourse
love r's discou rse which is woven of languorous desire,
of the image-repertoire,
image-repertoi re, of declarations? But he who utters
discourse
this discou rse and shapes its episodes does not know that
a book is to be made of them; he does not yet know that
as a good cultural subject he should neither repeat nor
contradict him self, nor take the whole for the part; all he
himself,
knows is that what passes through his mind at a certain
moment is marked,
marked. like the printout of a code (in other
times, this would have been the code of courtly love, or
the Carte du Tendre)
Tend re)..
5
Each
Each of of us cancan fill
fill in
in this
this code
code according
according to his own own
hi story; rich
history; rich oorr poor, the
the figure
figure must be be there, the site (the
compartment)
compartment) must must be reserved
reserved for for it. It is as if there
were
were an an amorous Topic, whose whose figure
figure was a site (topas)
(topos) .
Now the property of of a Topic isis to to be somewhat
somewhat empty: a
Topic is statulOrily
statutorily half coded, half projective (or projec-
tive because coded).
coded). What
What wc we have been able to say below
about waiting, aanxiety,
nx iety, memory
memory is no more than a modest
supplement
supplement offered 10 to the reader to be made free with, to
be added to, subtracted from from,, and
and passed on to others:
around the figure, the players pass the handkerchief which
sometimes, by by a final parenthesis, is held a second longer
before handing it on. ((Ideally, Ideally, the book would be a co-
operative: "To the Uni ted Readers and L
United overs.")
Lovers.")
What reads as the heading of each figure is not its
definition but its argument. ArgumcIIllIm: "ex position , ac-
Argumentum: "exposition,
count, summary, plot ou tline, invented narrative"; I
outline,
should add: instrument of distancing, signboard a la
Brecht.
Brech1. This argument does not refer to the amorous sub-
ject and what he is (no one external to this subject, no
discourse on love) , but to what he says. If there is such a
figure
fi gure as ""Anxiety,"
Anxiety," it is because
b::cause the subject sometimes
exclaims (without any concern for the clinical sense of the
word):: "I
word) " I am having an anxiety attack! attack!"" Anxiety,
Anguish.. . . "A ngoscia!"
Anguish ngosein.'" Callas sings somewhere.
somewhere . The
figure is a kind of opera aria; just as this aria is is identified,
identified.
memorized, and manipulated through its its incipit
illcipil ( " When I1
laid ," "Pleurez,
am laid," "Plellrez . mes
m es yeux," "Lucevan
''LlIcel'(m le stelle,"
slelle,"
"Piangero
" Piallgero la mia sorte"
sorle")),, so the figure takes its its departure
from a turn of phrase,
ph rase, a kind of verse, refrain,
refrai n, or
or cantilla-
canti\la-
tion which articulates
arliculates it in the darkness.
It is said that words alone have specific uses uses., not
not sen-
tences; but underneath each figure lies lies aa sentence,
sentence, fre-
quently an unknown (unconscious?
(unconscious?)) one, which which hashas its
its
6
use in the signifying economy of the amorous subject. This
T his
matrix-sentence (here merely postulated) is not a "satu-
rated" OIlC,
one, not a completed message. Its active principle
bUI what it articulilles
is not what it says but articulates : by and large, itil
is only a ""sy ntactical aria,"
syntactical aria, " a " mode of construction
construction." ." For
in stance, if the subject awaits the loved object at a
instance,
rendezvous, a sentence-aria keeps running through his
head: ""All
All the it's 110(
fhe same, if's not fair
fair ,. ,. ,"j
." ; "he
" he// she
she could
cOl/ltl
have . . .,"";; "he/she
have. "he/ she knows perfeclly
perfectly well
well.. . ..":": knows
knows
what? It doesn't
doesn 't matter, the figure ""Waiting"
Wailing" is already
already
formed. Such sentences aTC are matrices of figures precisely
because they remain suspended: they utter the affect, affect, then
break off, their
theiT role is filled
filled.. The words are never crazed
(at most perverse)
perverse)., but the syntax is: is it not on o n the level
of the sentence that the subject seeks his place-and place- and failsfail s
to find it-or finds a falsefal se plllce
place imposed upon him by
language? Underneath the figure.
lllnguage? figure, there is something of the
" verbal
"ve rbal hallucination" (Freud, Lacan):Laca n ) : a mutilated sen-
tence which is generally lim limited
ited to its syntactical portion
("Even though you are arC . .. " ""If If you were still . .. ") .
Whence the emotion of every figure figure:: even the mildest
bears within it the terror of 11a suspense: in it, it, I hear the
tempestuous, Neptunian quos ego
tempeSlUolls,
2 Order
Throughout any love life, life, figures occur to the lover
without
witho order,
ut any orde r. for on each occasion they depend on on
an (i (internal accident. Confronting each of
nternal or external) accident.
these incidents " befalls" him),
incidems (what "befalls" him) , the amorous subject
draws on the reservoir ((the thesaurus?)
the thesa urus? ) of figures
figures,, depend-
ing on the needs,
needs. the injunctio
injunctions,
ns, oorr the pleasures of his
image-repertoire. Each figure explodes, vibrates in and of
itself
itse lf like a sound severed from any tune-or is repeated
to satiety, like the motif of a hovering
hoveri ng music
music.. No logic
7
lilinks
nks the fifigures,
gures. dete rmines their con
determines tiguity: the fifigures
contiguity: gures
are non-syntagmatic, non-narrative; they arc Erinycs: they
are Erinyes;
sti r. collide.
st ir, collide, subside, retu rn , vani
return, sh wi
vanish withth no more order
than the nigh fli ghtt of mosq uitoes. Amorous dis-cursus
mosquitoes. dis- cllrslI s is not
ddialectical;
ialec tical; ilit turns
turn s like a perpetual calendar.
calendar, an un encyclo-
pedia of afTectivc
affective ('ullUre
culture ((there
there is someth
something ing of Bouvard
Bouva rd
PecuChCI in Ihe
and Pecuchet the lover) ,.
In linguist
linguistic ic terms, onc one might say that thut the figures
figu res arearc
distributional
distributio nal but not integrative; they always remain remai n on all
the same level:level : the lover speaks in bundles of sentences
but does nOI not integrate these sentences on o n a higher level,
into a workwork;; his hi s is a hori zonta l discourse:
horizontal discourse : no transcen-
dence, no deli verance. no novel ((though
deliverance, though a great deal dea l of
the fictive).
ficti ve). Every amorous episode can be, of course, cou rse.
endowed with a meaning: ilit is generated. generated, develops,
develops. and
dies; it follows a path which it is always possible to inter-
pret according to a causality finality-even,, if need
causa lity or a finality-even
be, which can be moralized ("/ was out of my mind, I'm
bc,
ol'er
over it IInow"OW" " Lol'e is a trap which must be avoided
"Love m'oided fromIrom
now 0/1" on" eetc.):
tc.): this is the Ihe love story, subjugated to the
great narrative Other, Other. to that general opinionopinio n which dis-
parages any excessive force and wants the subject himself
to reduce the great imaginary current, the th e orderless,
o rderless, end-
less stream which is passing through him, him , to a painful,
morbid ccrisisrisis of which he must be cured, cured. which he must must
"get over"ove r" ("It
( " It develops,
develops. grows,
grows. causes
cau ses suffering,
suffering. and a nd
passes away" in the fashion so me Hippocratic disease)
fashion of some disease)::
the love story Story (t (the
he "episode," the "adventure")
" ad venture") is is the
tribute the lover must pay to the world in order to be
reconciled with it. it,
Very different soliloquy. the aside
differen t is the discourse, the soliloquy, asidc
which accompanies this story SlOry (and
( and this story ). without
thi s hi story), lI'itholll
ever
cl't'r knowing it. It is the very principle of of this discourse
(and of the text which wh ich represents it) il) that itsits figures
figure s cannot
8
be
be classified: organized, hierarchized, arranged
arranged with a view
to an end
end (a settlement): there are no first figures, no last
let it be understood
figures. To Ict understood that
that there was no question
here of a love story (or of the history of aa 1 ove) , 10
love), to
discourage the temptation of meaning, itit was necessary to
choose an absolure/y insignificant order. Hence we have
absolutely illsignific(l1II
subjugated the series of figures (inevitable as any series is,
sisince
nce the book is by its
its status obliged to progress) to a
pair of arbitrary factors: that of nomination and that of
the alphabet. Each of these arbit rary fa
arbitrary ctors is nonetheless
factors
tempered: oncone by semantic necessity (among all the nouns noun s
in the dictionary, a figure can receive only two or three),
age-old convention
the other by the agc-old convention which decides the
order of our alphabet. Hence we have avoided the wiles of
pure chance, which might indeed have produced logical
sequences; for we must
sequenccs; must not, one mathematician tells us,
" underestimate the power of chance to engender mon-
"underestimate
sters";; the monster, in this case, would have been, emerg-
sters"
ing from a certain order of the figures, a "philosophy
"phi losophy of
love" where we must look for no more than its affirma-
tion.
3 R eferences
References
In order to compose this amorous subject, pieces of
various origin have been ""putput together." Some come
from an ordinary reading, that of Goethe's Werther.
Plato's Symposium,
Some come from insistent readings ((Plato's
Zen, psychoanalysis, certain Mystics, Nietzsche, German
lieder)
lieder).. Some come from occasional readings
readings.. Some come
from conversations with
wit h friends.
friends . And there are some
which come from my own life.
What comes from books and from friends occasionally
appears in the margin of the text
text,, in the form
form of names
names
(for the books) and initials (for the friends). The refer-
9
coces
ences supplied in this fashion
fa shion arc
are not authoritative but
arnica!;
amical: I am not invoking guarantees, merely recalling, by by
a kind of salute given in passing,
passing, what has seduced, con-
vinced, or what has momentarily given the delight of un-
derstanding (of being understood?).
understood?), Therefore, these
remi nders of reading, of listening,
reminders listen ing. have been left in the
frequently uncerta in , incompleted state suitable to a dis-
uncertain,
course whose occasion is indeed the memory of the sites
encounters)) where such aand
(books, encounlcrs nd such a thing has been
read
read., spoken, heard. For if the author here lends his "cul- ;'cul-
ture"
tu re" to the amorous subject, in exchange the amorous
subject
su bject affords him the innocence of his image-repertoire,
image- repertoi re,
indifferent
indi fferent to the proprieties of knowledge.
knowledge .
1I succumb . .. "
. ."
s'abimer
s' ab'imer I/ to be engulfed
Outburst of annihilation which affects the amorous
subject in despair or fulfillment.
Another day, in the rain , we're waiting for the boat at the
lake; from happiness, this th is time, the same outburst of
annihilation
annihi lation sweeps through me. mc. ThThis
is is how it happens
sometimes, misery or joy engu engulfs
lfs me, without
wi thout any partic-
ular tumult ensuing : nor any pathos:
tumu lt ensuing: pathos : I am dissolved, not
ddismembered;
ismembered; I fall, flow,, I melt. Such thoughts-
fall , I flow thoughts -
grazed, touched, tested (the way you test the water with
grazed,
your foot)--can
foot)-<.:an recur. Nothing solemn about them.
This is exactly what gentleness is.
Rue du Cherche-Midi
Cherche-Midi,, after a difficu lt evening, X was
difficult
explaining
explain ing very carefully, his voice exact, his sentences
well-formed, far from anything inexpressible, that some-
times he longed to swoon
swoon;; he regretted neve
neverr being able to
disappear at will.
His words were saying that he meant then to succumb to
hi s weakness, not to resist the wounds the world inflicted
in fli cted
upon him; but at the same time he was substituting for thi thiss
failing strength another strength , another affirmation: I
assume toward alld
as.mme and against cvery/fling
everything a ddenial
enial of courage,
courage,
hence a (leniaf
hellce denial of morality: that is what X's voice was was
saying.
SARTR E: On swooni
SARTRE: swoon ing
ng and anger as evas
e>-3sions, emotions.
ions, The Emotions.
The Absent One
absence / abse nce
absence
Anyy episode of language which stages the absence
An
object-whatever
of the loved object- whatever its cause and its
durat ion-and
duration- to transfo
and which tends 10 rm this
transform
absence
abse nce into
inlo an ordeal of abandonment.
aba ndonment.
1.
I. Many lieder, songs,, and m elo(iies
ticder, songs elodies about the be- bc*
loved's
loved absence. And yet this
's absence. Ihis classic figure is not to be
found in Werlhcr.
Werther. The reason is simple: here the loved
Wel'lher
object (Charlotte) does not move; move ; it is the amorous sub-
ject (Wcrther)
(Werther) who, at a ce rtain moment, departs. Now,
certain Now.
absence cacann exist only as a consequence
on ly liS conscqu\!llCC of the Ihe other: it is
the other who leaves, it is II who remain. The T he other is in a
condition of perpetual departure,
departure. of journeying; the other othe r
is,
is. by vocation, migrant, fugitive; I- I who
vocalion. migrant. who love, by con-
verse vocation, am sedentary.
sedentary, motionless, at hand, in ex-
pectation,
pect:Hion, nailed 10 to the spot. in
Ihe spot, ill suspense-like
SI/.f/)('IISe-like a package
in some fo forgotten
rgotten corner of a railway station. slalion. Amorous
absence functions
runctions in a single direction
direct ion., expressed by the
one
onc who stays,
stays. never by the one who leaves leaves:: an always
always
present I is constituted only by confrontation
confrontalion with an an al-
al-
ways absent you.yOIl. To speak this Ihis absence is from from the
Ihe start
to propose thatlhal the subject's place and the the other's place
cannot permute ; it
cannol il is to say
say:: ",. I, am loved less tha thann II
love."
2. Historically,
Historically. the discourse of absence isis carried
carried on
by the
Ihe Woman
Woman:: Woman is sedentary,
sedentary. Man hunts,
hunts, jour-
jour-
14
neys; Woman is faithful (she waits waits),), man is is fickle (he
H ugo
Hugo
sail
sailss away, he crui ses) . It is Woman who gives shape to
cruises)
absence, elaborates its fiction,
fiction , for
fo r she has time to do so; so ;
she weaves and she sings; the Spinning Songs express both
immobility ((byby the hum of the Wheel Wheel)) and absence (far
away, rhythms of travel, sea surges, cavalcades cavalcades). ). ItIt fol-
lows that in any man who utters the oth er's absence some-
other's
thing femilline
feminine is declared:
declared : this man who waits wai ts and who
suffers from hihiss waiting is miraculously feminized
femini zed.. A man
feminized
is not femi nized because he is inverted but because he is in
love. (Myth aand nd utopia
utopia:: the origins have belonged, the
future will belong to the th e subjects in whom
ill wh om th eree is
Iher i.1 some-
same-
.B.
E. B. thillg
thing feminil1e.
feminin e.))
3,
3. Sometimes I have no difiiculty endu ri ng absence.
difficulty enduring
Then I am "norma]"';
" normal ": I fall in with the way "everyone"
endures the departure of a "beloved person" person ";; II diligently
obey the tmining
training by whi whichch I was very early
early accustomed to
be separated from my mother-which mother- which nonetheless
nonetheless re-
mai ned,, at its source, a matter of suffering (not
mained ( not to say
hysteria)
hysteria).. I behave
bchave as a well-weaned subject subject;; I can feed
myself, mCm eanwhile,
({l/I vhil e, on other things besides the maternal
breast.
This
T hi s endured absence is nothing more or less than forget-
fulness. I am, intermittently, unfaithful. This
fulness, Thi s is
is the
th e condi-
survival;; for if I did not forget.
tion of my survival forget , I should die.
The lover
love r who doesdoesn't sometimes
n't forget som elimes dies of excess,
Werther
exhaustion, and tension of memory (lik (likee Werther).
Wcrther ) .
(Ass a cchild,
(A hild, I did
didn't
n't forget:
forgct: interminable
interminabl e days
days,, abandoned
days, when the Mother was working far away; away; I would go,
go,
HU GO:' " W
IWGO o m an, whom do )"01,1
Woman. you weep fo r?" " T
The
he abse onc" ("L'Ab
nt one"
absent ("'L'A b.-
sent," a pOem
sem." poem sellO
sell O m
musi aun!)..
usicc by F aure)
.B.: Letter.
E.B.: Lell er.
15
evenings.
evenings, [0to wait
wait for her al
at the U bi' bus slop.
the Uhi. stop, Scvrcs-
Sevres-
Babylone; the buses wouldwould pass oone
nc after the ol her. she
other,
wasn't
wasn't in ;lIlY
any ofof them .)
them.)
4. I w;tkcn
waken oul
out of Ihis vcry quickly. In
this forgetfulness very
great
great haste,
haste, I reconstitute
recon stitute a memory, a confusion. A
(classic) word comes from [he the body.
body, which expresses the
emotion of absence:
emOlioll absence : /0 sigh: "to
10 sigh: " to sigh for the bodily
presence": the two halves of Ihe the androgyne sigh for each
other.
other, as if each breath.breath , being incomplete, soughtsough t to
\0
Ruysbroec
Ruysb r o<:ckk
mingle with the other: the image of Ihe the embrace.
embrace , in that it
SYlIlpos iulIl
5)"'I'OS;"'" melts the two images into 11a si single one: in aamorous
ngle onc: morous ab-
Did ero t unglued illul[:e
image that dries.
sence, I am.am, sad
sadly,
ly. an IIng/ued dries , yellows,
yellows.
shrivels.
sh rivel s.
5.
5, Endlessly I susta
sustain
in the discourse of the beloved's
absence; actually a preposterous situation; the other is
referent, present as a[[oclltory,
absent as referent. allocutory. This singular dis-
tortion generates a kind of in
!Ortion supportable present
insupportable present;; I am
wedged between two tenses, that of the reference and th at
that
of the allocution: you have gone (which I lament) lament)., you
are here (since I am addressing you),
you). Whereupon I know
what the present,
present. that difficult tense, is:
is : a pure portion of
anxiety.
OIO" l OT:: ""Bring
DIDEROT )'Ollf lips
Bring your tips to mine/
mine / so Ihal
th a t 0\11 sout
mOluh / my soul
out of my mouth
p355 into
may pass inlo yours" (Chall son !fans le
(C/IIII1JOII II' gou
go!" t 1/1'
de lala romance ).
ron"",c<,).
16
Absence persists-I must endure it. Hence I will manipu-
late it: transform the distortion of time into oscillation,
osci llation,
produce rhythm, make an entrance onto on to the stage of lan-
guage (language is born of absence: the child has made
himself a doll out of a spool, throws it away and picks it
up again
again,, miming the mother's departu re and return: a
departure
paradigm is created). Absence becomes an active practice,
business (which keeps me from doing anything else);
a bllsiness
there is a creation of a fiction which has many many roles
(doubts, reproaches, desires, melancholies).
melancholies) . This staging
of language postpones the other's death: a very short in-
Winnicon
Winnicott
terval, we are lold,
terval. told, separales
separates the time during which the
child still believes his mother to be absent and the time
during which he believes her to be already dead. To ma-
nipulate absence is to
10 extend this interval,
interval, to delay as long
long
as possible the moment when the other might topple
sharply from absence into death.
7. I take a seat,
scat, :Iionc,
alone, in a cafe; people come over
and speak to me; I feel feci that I am sought after, surrounded,
surrounded.
BUI the other is absent; I invoke the other in-
flattered. But
wardly to keep me on the Ihe brink of this mund mundaneane com-
placency, a temptation
temptation.. I appeal
appea l to the Ihe other's
o ther's " truth"
(the truth of which the other gives giYes me the sensation)
sensation)
against
agai nst the hysteria of sed seduction
uction into which II feel fecI myself
myself
slipping. I make the other's absence responsible for
slipping. for my
my
worldl iness: I invoke
worldliness: im'oke the o ther's protection,
other's protection , the other's
return: let the other appear, take me away, like a mother
who comes
co mes looking for her child, from this worldly bril-
liance, from this socilll infatuation. let the other restore to
social infatuation,
me " the religious
rel igious intimacy, the gravity"
gr<l vity" of the lover's
lovc r's
world. (X once told me that tll<1t love had protected him him
against worldliness: coteries, ambitions, advancements,
advancements,
interferences, alliances,
all iances. secessions,
secessions. roles,
roles, powers:
powcrs: love
had made him into a social ca catastrophe,
tastrophe, to his delight.)
delight. )