• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Aesthetic Realism: Life, Love & Learning

Leila Rosen, English Educator & Aesthetic Realism Associate

  • Home
    • About Me
  • Life & Love
    • What, in Ourselves, Hinders True Love?
    • Being Important: What Does It Mean & What Mistakes Do We Make about It?
    • What Are Women Looking For in Love?
    • What’s Real Intelligence—about Ourselves & the World?
    • What, in a Woman Herself, Interferes with Love?
    • A Woman’s Determination: Right or Wrong?
    • Caring for People—Wisdom or Foolishness?
    • The Fight in Women between Security & Adventure—Is There a Beautiful Solution?
    • Justice versus Injustice in Men & Women
    • We Want to Be Happy—But Do We Also Want Not to Be?
    • What Does Getting Ahead Really Mean?
    • What Is a Husband’s Biggest Mistake?
    • Can Men & Women Be Intelligent in Love?
    • A Man’s Imagination: What Makes It a Friend or Foe?
    • What Is Woman’s Greatest Victory—Appearing Beautiful or Seeing Beautifully?
    • Public Self & Private Thoughts—Does A Man Have To Pretend?
    • Wowing People and Liking Oneself—What Is the Difference?
    • Does Our Anger Weaken or Strengthen Us?
    • What, in Ourselves, Hinders True Love?
    • Individuality and Love: Do They Have to Fight?
    • The Beauty of Baseball Shows Us How We Want to Be!
  • Successful Teaching: Here’s How
    • Through Aesthetic Realism Interest Wins, Cynicism Loses
    • On Gogol’s “The Nose,” a Satire on Snobbishness
    • Lessons on Rhyme, Using the Aesthetic Realism Teaching Method
    • Students Choose Knowing the World, Not Fighting with It
    • More on the Aesthetic Realism Teaching Method
  • Language, Literature & Poetry
    • Man Is Poetically Shown in Southern Road, 1932
    • How Musical Can Sadness Be?—or, Grief, Anger, Hope
    • The World Is in Idioms
    • Art Is Within Science
    • Poetry, Atmosphere, and Neatness
    • Some Poetry Is Distinguished
    • The Old Wives’ Tale, by Arnold Bennett
    • A Thrilling Talk on Literature, by Sheldon Kranz
    • Favorite Links about Literature & Teaching English
    • Literature & Life: A Blog
  • Noted Men & Women
    • Queen Isabella of Castille
    • Elizabeth Palmer Peabody
  • Blog
  • Links–& More
    • Photos & Travel
      • Dominican Republic
      • Mississippi
      • Italy, 2012
      • Puerto Rico, 2016
      • Maine
      • Water and land, East Coast
      • Near home
      • Alaska
      • Utah
      • Photographs from some of my travels
      • Cities
    • To find out more about Aesthetic Realism

“What Marriage Is Really For”

April 30, 2017 by leirose

I recently read again a poem I feel is sweepingly beautiful: “A Marriage,” by Eli Siegel. In its free verse lines—many of them grand, some of them seemingly simple—it is about that meeting of one self and another, and that meeting of selves and the outside world, that are the essential thing in love. In Ellen Reiss’s commentary to the issue of The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known, in which Mr. Siegel’s lecture on this poem begins to be serialized, she explains:

Self and world are the biggest opposites in everyone’s life. And our deepest desire, Aesthetic Realism makes clear, is to like the world through knowing it. We become ourselves in proportion to how much we want to be fair to the world, have it of us. That is the reason for education, why people are impelled to learn. And it is the reason people are impelled to love.

Further: the pain about love, the letdown, the bitterness, why two people who thought they’d love forever now look at each other with fury or dullness, all arise from how the world has been dealt with by the people concerned. In an Aesthetic Realism lesson years ago, as he explained why I came to feel displeased with myself and a man who seemed to love me, Mr. Siegel said: “You used Mr. M to make a world somewhat apart from the world Aesthetic Realism tries to honor.” I find that sentence beautiful, and the explanation true. The very thing recommended by therapists, counselors, buddies, BFFs, and many thoughts of one’s own—to get away from the world with someone—is against what love really is!

Here is the last section of the poem, which is pulsatingly beautiful, which stands for love and marriage, and which shows the great meaning of what Ellen Reiss describes as the hero of the poem: “a word.”

20.
Eyes and mind together,
In thunder a hand lying on a hand.
Wheels whizzing to reach an active page, a learned page—a word.
And a hand lying on a hand,
And a cloud on a cloud,
And a mist over ocean,
And flower going off towards dazzling planets,
And a word meeting a word,
And a word meeting a word,
And a word meeting a word,
And North Carolina, Washington, Baltimore,
And a hand lying on a hand,
And a word.

Read the rest of this issue here.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Primary Sidebar

Kindness: definition & comment by Eli Siegel

People everywhere are looking for kindness from others, and we want to be kind too. But we can be mixed-up about what kindness really is. In his great work Definitions and Comment: Being a Description of the World, Eli Siegel shows what kindness is, in beautiful prose that makes this big human subject clear! You can read his definition and comment here.

© 2014–2025 by Leila Rosen