Expected an Author

When we see a natural style we are quite amazed and delighted, because we expected to see an author, and find a man.

Blaise Pascal, Pensées (trans. W.F. Trotter) (1670)

The word “find” does something unexpected in this sentence. We expected to see an author, Pascal says. That expectation is already a kind of seeing: we approach a text braced for performance, for the display of literary skill. But then something shifts, and in place of the performance we encounter a person. The natural style doesn’t advertise itself. It works by vanishing.

What Pascal calls “natural” is, of course, anything but easy. A style that reads as effortless usually conceals enormous labor, years of refinement that eventually become invisible. The paradox is that mastery, at its fullest, erases the evidence of itself. We stop noticing the writing and start feeling the writer.

And yet when we encounter a text today and cannot tell whether a person produced it, Pascal’s sentence takes on a different weight. What exactly have we lost? Perhaps nothing, if the words are clear and useful. But Pascal is pointing to a particular kind of pleasure that depends on meeting another consciousness, a pleasure closer to recognition than to admiration. We admire an author. We recognize a person. Recognition requires that someone actually be there to be recognized.

The quiet challenge in this fragment falls on both sides. For the reader, it asks whether we are still looking for the person, or have settled for the performance. For the maker, it asks something harder: is the work I’m shaping transparent enough to let the living, particular person show through? Technique that merely performs competence keeps us at the level of authorship. Only technique that has been so deeply absorbed it disappears can do what Pascal describes, can let the reader past the surface and into the surprise of finding someone actually there.

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