Sappho On Anger Management & The Taoist/Buddhist Concept Of Forget (忘)

Stuart Dean
Jul 25, 2017 · 5 min read
Fragment of a terracotta head from an ancient statue from Southern Italy: Metropolitan Museum of Art, Rogers Fund, 1922 (www.metmuseum.org). It is worth noting that in antiquity a statue of Sappho was commissioned by the citizens of Syracuse Sicily in honor of her having lived there; the statue was stolen by a corrupt Roman governor of Sicily in the last century BCE and has never been found. For more granularity on that click here.

A two line fragment of Sappho’s poetry (S.120) reads:

But I am not one to keep venting my anger:
Rather I let some things in my heart go unspoken

Sappho’s word choices here make this as difficult as any of her fragments to appreciate in translation. Yet, not only do those choices make attribution of this fragment to Sappho secure, they also manifest her importance in an area for which she rarely receives attention: early Greek medical thinking. One reason her importance in that regard is unnoticed is that Western medicine has to a great extent abandoned its own tradition, retaining only the nomenclature and some of the symbolism of early Greek medicine.

This is particularly noticeable with respect to the disciplines implicated by S.120. Sappho, like other Greeks of her time, deemed the heart to be the location of “the entire range of conscious experience, including perception, thought, emotion, desire and intuition.” Therefore, she would not have distinguished cardiology from psychology. Some translators feel the need to give Sappho the benefit of modern anatomical knowledge and use ‘mind’ to translate phrena, the standard Greek word for ‘heart’ Sappho uses here. Although such a translation is justifiable, it nonetheless betrays what can well be characterized as a symptom of cultural schizophrenia modern Western culture suffers from with respect to a wide range of issues that pit mind against body and ultimately spirituality against science. Such a schizophrenia is itself an artifact of how alienated modern Western culture is from its own roots.

The contrast of modern Western culture with modern Chinese culture in this regard could not be more pronounced. That is because modern Chinese culture (as well as cultures such as that of Korea that are closely related to it) remains connected to its roots, particularly with respect to aspects of ancient Chinese medical thinking that are not simply analogous, but identical, to those of ancient Greek medicine. The language quoted above to explain the meaning of ‘heart’ to ancient Greeks is Harold Roth’s explanation of the meaning of the Chinese pictographic character 心 (Romanized hsin or xin) found frequently in the earliest known Taoist poetry (compiled and translated by Roth as Original Tao (hereafter OT (p42))(the evidence for which dates from about a century after Sappho)).

Because of the continuity Chinese medicine has with its historical roots there is an abundant amount of evidence that can usefully be drawn upon to help fill in, by analogy, the otherwise all too fragmentary picture that exists today of early Greek medicine. The premise for doing so is that the known similarities reflect a common cultural ancestry of remote antiquity. There are surely other connections that — if only there were more evidence — could be made. Consider, for example, this line from OT: “To bring your anger to a halt there is nothing better than poetry” (OT p88). One reason for the connection of poetry and anger management: oral recitation, especially with quantitative meters, is an intuitive form of breath control. Not only is that principle implicit in S.120, but there is yet another fragment of Sappho’s on anger that also evinces an appreciation of the same principle (S.158). This is consistent with the way Lucretius compares his own philosophical poetry to medicine. That may be no accident: it is possible he understood Sappho’s famous characterization of love as ‘sweetbitter’ (S.130) to have been as much a diagnosis as a prescription and one that was generalizable to poetry itself as medicine for the ‘sweet bitterness’ of life.

The form of the verb Sappho uses for ‘anger’ in S.120 is unusual: ‘to get angry’ is found in the Iliad (no surprise) but it seems that exactly what Sappho says here (literally, ‘to get angry again’) originates with her. It is not attested thereafter until it and its cognates appear in a Hippocratic text where they are used metaphorically to refer to a festering wound. This is a curious instance of a psychological concept being applied to an ostensibly physical phenomenon. Given that not one word in any Hippocratic text can be attributed with confidence to the ‘father’ of Western medicine and given the rarity of the Greek term for ‘fester’ it seems reasonable to attribute its use as a medical term to Sappho’s influence. Furthermore, given that one type of festering wound — digestive tract ulcers (and the heartburn that often is their precursor) — can stubbornly defy Western medicine’s physical fixes and yet respond to Chinese acupuncture and associated modalities, it is fair to suppose Sappho may have been onto something of importance.

S.120’s survival is due to its quotation in a Byzantine era lexicon illustrating Sappho’s use of the adjective ‘unspoken.’ Many translate this as a positive term (‘quiet,’ ‘gentle,’ ‘calm’), but it is a negative term, formed with the alpha privative prefix on a root meaning ‘to speak.’ The ‘speaking’ it refers to was not ordinary speech but rather poetic, even oracular utterances with magical powers. What Sappho seems to be indicating with her use of the unusual negative term is that she is deliberately letting something go unsaid in order to empty it of a power it might otherwise have. An analogous principle seems to underlie her decision not to name the woman she thereby effectively condemns to being forgotten in S.55.

This happens to relate to a concept encountered in the poetry of OT that came to have profound importance in the reception of Buddhism in China, Korea and Japan: 忘 (wang). Typically translated as ‘forget,’ the Chinese character is a compound (as many Chinese characters are) of two characters: the pictograph 心 and the ideograph 亡, which by itself, depending on the context, can mean ‘flee’ or ‘perish.’ Forgetting is prescribed in OT as a remedy for a problematic emotional condition not unlike anger (worry) and, as the appearance of the character 忘 itself may well manifest, was associated with a type breath meditation characterized as fasting or being empty (cf. the meditation technique of pausing after an exhale).

A Korean Buddhist monk (dharma name Kihwa, family name Yu (ca 1400 CE)) placed special emphasis on 忘 in his commentary on The Sutra of Perfect Enlightenment. To Kihwa, 忘, wang, is at once curative (ending suffering) but also itself symptomatic — of enlightenment. Forgetting in this sense is thus not a-mnesia (the inability to remember) but ana-mnesia: remembering that not just anger or worry but every emotion ultimately has no substance and as such can and should be let go (emptied) at the appropriate time (it is also possible a case could be made that this is analogous to Christian forgiveness). A forgetting that is a remembering: the poetess with a taste for the ‘sweetbitter’ would have appreciated that paradoxical notion.

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If you found this of interest you may want to continue with my post: Sappho’s “Sweetbitter”: Her Taste, Its Legacy & The Implications.

It is useful to contrast the concept of forgetting discussed here as psychologically healthy with is the tendency deliberately to destroy or willfully ignore historical evidence (including statues) that is symptomatic of a type of neurosis or even psychosis (see When We Deliberately Destroy Or Willfully Ignore History).

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