The actual practices of a guild are rarely written down because, unlike an argument or a manifesto, they are hard to codify and are usually learned through doing. Crafts 鈥 from the mundane to the arcane, from plumbing to prestidigitation 鈥 are, in essence, a bit mysterious.
This is why accounts of Sir William Empson鈥檚 ideas are rarely the subject of PowerPoint slides or 鈥渋n a nutshell鈥 guides, yet every single student of English is initiated into the practice of close reading 鈥 which Empson played a crucial, almost alchemical, role in forming. This is also why interest in him is a bit, well, culty, to be honest: one learns the practice and only afterwards, like a protagonist in an H. P. Lovecraft story, does one discover 鈥 whisper 鈥 the source. And because the doing is the focus, the interest in Empson lies less in what is conjured up, more in the conjuration itself.
Everything you need to know about Empson鈥檚 life, almost, is in John Haffenden鈥檚 marvellous, gigantic biography and Selected Letters: Michael Wood鈥檚 short On Empson, a charmed and charming book of immense subtlety, insight and nuance, complements this by being about Empson鈥檚 craft, while displaying its own magic, both like and unlike Empson鈥檚.
Wood鈥檚 account of Empson as a writer 鈥 both poet and critic 鈥 begins with his scintillating analysis of the word 鈥渃atch鈥 in Macbeth, 鈥渘ot as a model 鈥 who could follow it? 鈥 but as a spectacular instance of what criticism can do, of how personal and imaginative it may be while remaining very close to the text鈥. Wood is aiming to 鈥渃atch鈥 (grasp, imprison, but also, and less antagonistically, hear, pay attention to, catch up with) Empson, setting himself a very high bar: one he reaches.
糖心Vlog
Born in 1906, Empson was expelled from the University of Cambridge in 1929 before he could take up a postgraduate fellowship because 鈥 we heard this story as undergraduates in the 1980s, still as living gossip 鈥 condoms were found in his rooms. He had begun Seven 鈥═ypes of Ambiguity, the book that made his name and helped to shape the discipline, as a student. Wood describes how Empson鈥檚 tutor, I. A. Richards, catches the moment of genesis: taking a 鈥渟onnet as a conjuror takes his hat, [Empson] produced an endless swarm of lively rabbits鈥.
Despite its title, Seven Types isn鈥檛 much good as a typology (鈥渋n a sense the sixth class is included within the fourth鈥 and so on). But Wood argues that the types are 鈥渇ictions that give us time to think鈥: the critical grist is the idea of ambiguity, 鈥渁ny verbal nuance, however slight, which gives room for alternative reactions to the same piece of language鈥. So, Wood and Empson, on Macbeth again: 鈥渓ight thickens, and the Crow/Makes wing to th鈥 Rookie wood鈥: 鈥淩ookie鈥 does not mean 鈥渕urky or damp or misty or steamy or gloomy or having to do with rooks. It means all of these things. 鈥業t makes you bear in mind all the meanings it puts forward鈥.鈥 This facing or embracing the 鈥渟imultaneous presence of many meanings鈥 is one characteristic which makes literary studies a different subject from all others, and means close reading is an open-ended, hard-to-pin-down and shared practice (one reason it makes such great pedagogy). Yet its consequences, and potential contradictions, for students and scholars of literature, are much more complicated. They were more complicated for Empson, too, and this also is what Wood鈥檚 book has brilliantly caught.
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The seventh, final type of ambiguity demonstrates 鈥渁 fundamental division in the writer鈥檚 mind鈥. For Wood, it is the most profound because it illuminates 鈥渢he most complicated and deeply-rooted notion鈥 of living an unresolvable contradiction. Empson, Wood tentatively suggests through reading his verse, spent his life 鈥減erched among contradictions鈥, including 鈥渉is career in poetry and criticism鈥. He taught and travelled in Japan and China, spent the war in the BBC Overseas Service before taking a chair at the University of Sheffield in 1953: during this period, he gave up poetry. Where Empson earlier found contradictions productive (鈥渁s a form of liberty鈥), leading to balance or unification or poise held between two forces, he no longer knew 鈥渨hat to do with them, except to register the mess鈥.
听The Structure of Complex Words听(1951), his masterpiece, I think, focuses on how certain words (鈥渉onest鈥 in Othello, 鈥渇ool鈥 in King Lear) accumulate meanings 鈥 and so, Wood notes, defy 鈥渢he very notion of anything as stable as structure鈥. Yet Wood turns this style back on Empson, too, and finds himself at odds with Empson鈥檚 upper-class English heartiness. Indeed, this critical biography is not uncritical of Empson. Wood shows how Empson sometimes seems to be 鈥渙n the way to inventing a Monty Python school of literary criticism鈥 by suggesting, say, what Coleridge should have written. As he writes about a reading of Hamlet, 鈥淓mpson鈥檚 idea of Shakespeare鈥檚 鈥榤ethod鈥 makes the film Shakespeare in Love look like a documentary鈥. He is also clear-sighted about Empson鈥檚 apparent hatred of 鈥渓iterary theory鈥 (鈥渙nly congratulating itself on its own cleverness鈥) yet aware of his interest, at root, in many of the same ideas.
Wood writes that if Empson鈥檚 work 鈥渄oesn鈥檛 look like much of the criticism we know, it is because it isn鈥檛鈥. Great critics may be inimitable in their reach and style, and Wood doesn鈥檛 mean this remark to castigate continuing conversations of literary theoretical and critical scholarship. But I do think there is much criticism and theory that resembles or descends from Empson鈥檚, and not only in the work of critics, such as Christopher Ricks, who explicitly claim it.
Two books that draw on literature arrived the same week as On听Empson. Wood makes much of the fact that while we often have to live with contradictions, Empson loathes the way that this can become 鈥渁n alibi, a license to abuse others or ignore their suffering or gloat over it鈥. Sara Ahmed鈥檚 Living a听Feminist Life shares something of this sentiment: its belief that understanding literature is not far from understanding life, her insight into the everyday and her style give her work, like Empson鈥檚, a performative intensity and power. Ben Knights鈥 Pedagogic Criticism, too, uses close reading and 鈥渟imultaneous presence of many meanings鈥 to unpick the often untraced influence of reading on teaching and teaching on reading. Precisely because 鈥渇ashionable names fade鈥 yet 鈥減ractice continues鈥, as Wood puts it, Empson鈥檚 influence seems just as strong as ever, and recognising it is important, because part of the point of education, and literary criticism, is to make hidden things appear, a trick against tricks.
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If this book, a great critic on a great critic, were in paperback, I鈥檇 give it to my students not only because it demonstrates and describes 鈥渢he kinds of adventure that reading can afford鈥 but for its easy humour and more challenging insights (鈥淚 would love to believe, with Brecht, that whatever stimulates thinking 鈥榠s useful to the cause of the oppressed鈥 but I am afraid that if an oppressor thinks more and better, he will only get better at oppressing鈥). Wood saw Empson lecture only once and 鈥渇elt the passion and the mind in play, and there was something wonderfully tireless about the performance, as if talking avidly about literature and life was the best thing anyone could be doing鈥. As if, notice, it might.
Robert Eaglestone is professor of contemporary literature and thought, Royal Holloway, University of London.
On Empson
By Michael Wood
Princeton University Press,听224pp, 拢18.95
ISBN 9780691163765 and 9781400884742 (e-book)
Published 9 April 2017

The author
Michael Wood, emeritus professor of English and comparative literature at Princeton University, was born in Lincoln.
When he asked a teacher at his grammar school there whether he should do his national service before or after going to Cambridge, 鈥渉e didn鈥檛 say anything, just gave me a copy of Stendhal鈥檚 Charterhouse of Parma, with its magnificent view of the battle of Waterloo through the eyes of a baffled Italian boy. I decided to go to Cambridge first.鈥
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In his thinking about literature, Wood says that he has been enriched by 鈥渕any first-hand encounters with writers 鈥 I think of Philip Roth, Octavio Paz and Toni Morrison in particular鈥 treasure all these conversations in themselves. But mainly they taught me how different reading is from writing, and how to think about the difference. Criticism is a form of writing, of course, but it鈥檚 about reading.鈥
William Empson, the subject of Wood鈥檚 new book, 鈥渉as always been hovering in my mind since I first read him when I was a student. I don鈥檛 think I ever got over the thrill of seeing what he could do with texts and language 鈥 or perhaps of seeing, through him, what could be done. Literature itself becomes a constant excitement when you see how much is going on even in simple sentences, and a lot of ordinary language becomes literature. The philosopher Stanley Cavell has been important to me, too, in this respect.鈥
糖心Vlog
As for the state of academic criticism today, Wood believes that 鈥渟ome amazing work is being done, and I like the way the best of it crosses boundaries 鈥 between literature and film, literature and painting, literature and history鈥 The main thing is to keep working, and not be tempted to sell criticism as something else: therapy, for example, or propaganda, instead of the exercise of freedom of thought.鈥
Matthew Reisz
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:听Many rabbits in a conjurer鈥檚 hat
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