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s; offered from his Paris exile; became thecreed of his early writing。 ‘In most of the novels written by Negroes until today;’ he wrote; ‘thereis a great space where sex ought to be; and what usually fills this space is violence。’
Go Tell It on the Mountain is a very sensual novel; a book soaked in the Bible and theblues。 Spiritual song is there in the sentences; at the head of chapters; and it animates the voices onevery side during the ‘ing through’ of John Grimes。 As he steps up to the altar John issuddenly aware of the sound of his own prayers – ‘trying not to hear the words that he forcedoutwards from his throat’。 Baldwin’s language has the verbal simplicity of the Old Testament; aswell as its metaphorical boldness。 The rhythms of the blues; a shade of regret; a note of pain risingout of experience; are deeply inscribed in the novel; and they travel freely along the lines ofdialogue。 There is a kind of metaphorical; liturgical energy in some novels – in Faulkner’s TheSound and the Fury; in Joyce’s Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man; in Elizabeth Smart’s ByGrand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept; in Toni Morrison’s Beloved – which is utterlyessential to the art。 It may seem at first overpowering; to waft in the air like perfume; or to have thetexture of Langston Hughes’s velvet bag; but it is; in each of the cases; and especially in the caseof Baldwin’s first novel; a matter of straightforward literary integrity。 Every word is necessary。
Every image runs clear in the blood of the novel。
Take John’s mother Elizabeth。 Look at the shape of her thoughts on the page; as broughtout in Baldwin’s third…person narrative:
‘I sure don’t care what God don’t like; or you; either;’ Elizabeth heart replied。 ‘I’mgoing away from here。 He’s going