The gods, they say,
give breath, and they take it away. But the same could be said— could it
not?—of the humble comma. Add it to the present clause, and, of a sudden, the
mind is, quite literally, given pause to think; take it out if you wish or
forget it and the mind is, deprived of a resting place. Yet still the comma
gets no respect. It seems just a slip of a thing, a pedant’s tick, a blip on
the edge of our consciousness, a kind of printer’s smudge almost. Small, we
claim, is beautiful (especially in the age of the microchip). Yet what is so
often used, and so rarely called, as the comma—unless it be breath itself? Punctuation, one is
taught, has a point: to keep up law and order. Punctuation marks are the road
signs placed along the highway of our communication—to control speeds, provide
directions and prevent head-on collisions. A period has the unblinking finality
of a red light; the comma is a flashing yellow light that asks us only to slow
down; and the semicolon is a stop sign that tells us to ease gradually to a
halt, before gradually starting up again. By establishing the relations between
words, punctuation establishes the relations between the people using words.
That may be one reason why school teachers exalt it and lovers defy it (“We
love each other and belong to each other let’s don’t ever hurt each other
Nicole let’s don’t ever hurt each other,” wrote Gary Gilmore to his
girlfriend). A comma, he must have known, “separates inseparables”, in the
clinching words of H. W. Fowler, King of English Usage. Punctuation, then, is
a civic prop, a pillar that holds society upright. (A run-on sentence, its
phrases piling up without division, is as unsightly as a sink piled high with
dirty dishes.) Small wonder, then, that punctuation was one of the first
proprieties of the Victorian age, the age of the corset, that the modernists
threw off: the sexual revolution might be said to have begun when Joyce’s Molly
Bloom spilled Out all her private thoughts in 36 pages of unbridled, almost
unperioded and officially censored prose: and another rebellion was surely
marked when E. E. Cummings first felt free to commit “God” to the lower case. Punctuation thus
becomes the signature of cultures. The hot-blooded Spaniard seems to be
revealed in the passion and urgency of his doubled exclamation points and
question marks (“!Caramba!? Quien sabe?”), while the impassive Chinese
traditionally added to his so-called inscrutability by omitting directions from
his ideograms. The anarchy and commotion of the ‘60s were given voice in the exploding
exclamation marks, riotous capital letters and Day-Glo italics of Tom Wolfe’s
spray—paint prose; and in Communist societies, where the State is absolute, the
dignity — and divinity — of capital letters is reserved for Ministries,
Sub-Committees and Secretariats. Yet punctuation is
something more than a culture’s birthmark; it scores the music in our minds,
gets our thoughts moving to the rhythm of our hearts. Punctuation is the
notation in the sheet music of our words, telling us when to rest, or when to
raise our voices; it acknowledges that the meaning of our discourse, as of any
symphonic composition, lies not only in the units but in the pauses, the pacing
and the phrasing. Punctuation is the way one bats one’s eyes, lowers one’s
voice or blushes demurely. Punctuation adjusts the tone and color and volume
till the feeling comes into perfect focus: not disgust exactly, but distastes;
not lust, or like, but love. Punctuation, in short,
gives us the human voice, and all the meanings that lie between the words. “You
aren’t young, are you?” loses its innocence when it loses the question mark.
Every child knows the menace of a dropped apostrophe (the parent’s “Don’t do
that” shifting into the more slowly enunciated “Do not do that”), and every
believer, the ignominy of having his faith reduced to “faith”. Add an
exclamation point to “To be or not to be...” and the gloomy Dane has all the
resolve he needs; add a comma, and the noble sobriety of “God save the Queen”
becomes a cry of desperation bordering on double sacrilege. Sometimes, of course, our markings may be
simply a matter of aesthetics. Popping in a comma can be like slipping on the
necklace that gives an outfit quiet elegance, or like catching the sound of
running water that complements as it completes the silence of a Japanese
landscape. When V. S. Naipaul, in his latest novel, writes, “He was a
middle-aged man, with glasses,” the first comma can seem a little precious. Yet
it gives the description a spin, as well as a subtlety, that it otherwise
lacks, and it shows that the glasses are not part of the middle-agedness, but
something else. Thus all these tiny
scratches give us breadth and heft and depth. A world that has only periods is
a world without inflections. It is a world without shade. It has a music
without sharps and flats. It is a martial music. It has a jackboot rhythm.
Words cannot bend and curve. A comma, by comparison, catches the gentle drift
of the mind in thought, turning in on itself and hack on itself, reversing,
redoubling and returning along the course of its own sweet river music; while
the semicolon brings clauses and thoughts together with all the silent
discretion of a hostess arranging guests around her dinner table. Punctuation, then, is a matter of care. Care for words, yes, but also, and more important, for what the words imply. Only a lover notices the small things: the way the afternoon light catches the nape of a neck, or how a strand of hair slips out from behind an ear, or the way a finger curls around a cup. And no one scans a letter so closely as a lover, searching for its small print, straining to hear its nuances, its gasps, its sighs and hesitations, poring over the secret messages that lie in every cadence. The difference between “Jane (whom I adore)” and “Jane, whom I adore” and the difference between them both and “Jane—whom I adore—” marks all the distance between ecstasy and heartache. “No iron can pierce the heart with such force as a period put at just the right place,” in Isaac Babel’s lovely words; a comma can let us hear a voice break, or a heart. Punctuation, in fact, is a labor of love, which brings us back in a way to gods.
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