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Observations placeholder

Michelangelo - Sonnet XV - The marble not yet carved can hold the form

Identifier

024464

Type of Spiritual Experience

Background

A description of the experience

Michelangelo – Sonnets [translated by Elizabeth Jennings]

Sonnet XV

The marble not yet carved can hold the form
Of every thought the greatest artist has,
and no conception ever, comes to pass
Unless the hand obeys the intellect.

The evil that I fly from, all the harm,
The good as well, are buried and intact
In you, proud Lady. To my life’s sad loss
My art's opposed to the desired effect.

Thus love, and your own, beauty and the weight
Of things, are not to blame for my own plight.
Fate, scorn or chance can never be accused

Because both death and pity are enclosed
Within your heart, and I-have only breath
And power to draw from you not life but death.

Michelangelo – Sonnets [translated by Addington Symonds]

The best of artists hath no thought to show
Which the rough stone in its superfluous shell
Doth not include; to break the marble spell
Is all the hand that serves the brain can do.

The ill I shun, the good I seek, even so
In thee, fair lady, proud, ineffable,
lies hidden; but the art I wield so well
Works adverse to my wish, and lays me low

Therefore not love, nor thy transcendent face.
Nor cruelty, nor fortune or disdain
Cause my mischance, nor fate, nor destiny

Since in thy heart thou carriest death and grace
Enclosed together, and my worthless brain
Can draw forth only death to feed on me

The source of the experience

Michelangelo

Concepts, symbols and science items

Concepts

Symbols

Nakedness
Plaits

Science Items

Activities and commonsteps

Activities

Suppressions

Believing in the spiritual world
LOVE

Commonsteps

References