Passage 118 · 1904
The Breaking String Motif (The Cherry Orchard)
Thesis of effectPassive perception, speculative clauses, and musical simile shape the sound as both cosmic omen and cultural elegy.
Device index
Hover a card to trace its span in the passage; click to pin its dossier card.
Tropes
Comparison using "like" or "as."
Giving human qualities to nonhuman phenomena.
Blending sensory modalities.
not span-anchoredImplicitly likening social collapse to snapped string.
not span-anchoredSchemes
Subject receives action.
Clause beginning with "that" expressing seeming.
Present participle modifying earlier clause.
Sequence of phrases separated by commas.
not span-anchoredSyntax
Stage direction invites directors to decide sound source; text refuses certainty.
not span-anchoredAssociates sound with aristocratic salon culture; string breaking equals end of class.
not span-anchoredTime slows; audience senses lingering decay.
Full dossier
1Ear & Prosody
Mouthfeel: Soft consonants (sound, seems, sky) create hush; harsh plosive in "breaking" snaps like string.
Cadence seams: Commas stagger rhythm; final phrase lengthens like fading echo.
Alliteration: s-s cluster in "sound…seems…sky" mimics whisper of wind.
Music argues: Sentence itself performs crescendo (sound appears) then diminuendo (dying away).
2Syntax As Style (Tufte-grade)
Sentence shape: Loose sentence layering passive base + relative clause + simile + participial coda.
Modification choreography:
- Preposed: None; begins with event.
- Mid: Relative clause inserted to describe source.
- Postposed: Simile and participial tail extend after main clause.
Coordination/subordination ratio: Subordination through "that seems"; rest is appositive/participial, creating floating feel.
Information flow: Event perceived → speculative origin → figurative likening → emotional fade.
Micro-rewrites:
- Compressed: "A sound is heard, apparently from the sky—like a harp-string breaking and fading sadly." — Still poetic but loses smooth cascade.
- Dilated: "A sound is heard, one that appears to descend from the sky itself, the delicate twang of a harp-string snapping and then ebbing away in mournful diminuendo." — Adds detail, perhaps too explicit.
3Deixis, Aspect, Modality
Deictic center: Stage present; no personal pronouns.
Aspect: Simple present describes stage action; participial indicates progressive fading.
Modality: "Seems" introduces epistemic uncertainty.
Temporal logic: Momentary event stretching into lingering fade.
4Image System & Field
Metaphor families:
1. Celestial — sound from sky.
2. Musical — harp-string imagery.
3. Mortuary — "dying away," mournfulness.
Lexical fields: Sensory perception, music, emotion.
Image logic: Heavenly music breaks and dies—like aristocratic paradise collapsing.
5Narrative Mechanics
Focalization: Stage direction guiding all characters simultaneously; omnipresent perspective.
Time: Occurs at pivotal scene; recurring motif throughout play.
Beat structure: Sudden sound → uncertain source → metaphorical reading.
Subtext: Estate's demise is fated; cosmic forces echo human tragedy.
6Appeals & Strategy
Ethos: Authorial control via precise yet ambiguous instruction invites theatrical interpretation.
Pathos: Mournful tone evokes nostalgia for vanished world.
Logos: Simile anchors intangible sound in recognizable object, aiding staging.
7Lineage & Kinships
Symbolist theatre: Shares with Ibsen and Strindberg atmospheric cues.
Chekhovian subtlety: Minimal action conveying vast social change.
Musical leitmotif: Echoes Wagnerian technique—recurring sound representing fate.
8Hotspots & Faultlines
Hotspots
- "seems to come from the sky" — supernatural suggestion.
- "like a breaking harp-string" — refined cultural metaphor.
- "dying away mournfully" — emotional register.
Faultlines
- Translation variance: Other versions say "snap"; nuance shifts intensity.
- Staging challenge: Directors must decide actual sound; text leaves gap.
9Revision Studio
Subtraction test: Remove "like a breaking harp-string"—mystery remains but loses cultural symbolism.
Amplification test: Add "heard again in the distance"—would foreshadow further but risk redundancy.
Register shift:
- Formal: "A sound is perceived, apparently descending from the heavens, akin to the snapping of a harp-string, ebbing away with mournful delicacy."
- Colloquial: "You hear a sound from above, like a harp string snapping, fading off sad."
Punctuation swap: Replace commas with em dash; would dramatize but disrupt gentle flow.
10Imitatio / Counter-imitatio
Imitatio: A sound is heard, seeming to drift from the rafters, like a violin string giving way, sighing into silence.
Counter-Imitatio: There is a sound from somewhere, like something breaking, fading. — Flat, lacks refinement.
Compression (≤25 words): A sound is heard, apparently from the sky—like a harp-string snapping, dying away in mourning.
11Steal This (Takeaways)
- Use passive perception to create uncanny intrusion.
- Pair "seems" with celestial origin to suggest fate without stating it.
- Anchor mysterious sound with refined musical simile to imply cultural loss.
- Let participial phrase enact acoustic fade-out.
- Combine sensory (sound), spatial (sky), and emotional (mournfully) registers for synesthetic depth.
- Stage directions can carry symbolism; treat them as prose poems.
- Keep diction simple so directors can implement easily despite symbolism.