Chapter Six: "The Vocation of Eloquence"
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The final talk is addressed to readers rather than writers, consumers of literature, rather than producers. Frye promises to explain "what literature can do and what its uses are, apart from the pleasure it gives" (p. 134). His first suggestion is that literature can educate the imagination:
- "Literature speaks the language of the imagination, and the study of literature is supposed to train and improve the imagination" (p. 134)
- "We have only the choice between a badly trained imagination and a well trained one" (pp. 134-35)
He returns to his dominant theme, saying, "My subject is the educated imagination, and education is something that affects the whole person, not bits and pieces of him. It doesn't just train the mind: it's a social and more development too" (p. 152).
Frye notes that the imagination, as an intermediary between the emotions and the intellect, provides the basis of social life, thus reiterating a point from his first lecture. The educated imagination knows what to make of advertising; indeed, says Frye, "Our reaction to advertising is really a form of literary criticism" (p. 138). Sensitivity to the use of words, freedom from cliché, is only possible for people who use their imagination (p. 154). And because the educated imagination is a necessity of life in a political world, the study of literature is not an "elegant accomplishment" but a means of entry into a "free society" (pp. 147, 148). The crisis of emptiness in modern life only underscores our need for education (p. 150), and specifically for literary education and reflection on the world that writers want: "a vision inside our minds, born and fostered by the imagination" (p. 151).
Frye takes the Tower of Babel as the organizing myth for the last talk and the whole series, suggesting "that the Tower of Babel is a work of human imagination, that its main elements are words, and that what will make it collapse is a confusion of tongues" (p. 155). The confusion of tongues at Babel is a loss of identity, for Frye, and a failure of imagination. Only a strong imagination, which is to say an educated one, can fulfil the Renaissance dream of rebuilding knowledge from the ruins of Babel.