We’ve all known people for whom laughter is a childish distraction, a shameful shortcoming produced by an essentially trivial mind. Of all people, George Santayana thinks otherwise:
“Laughter rings the
recess-bell in school hours; and then perhaps some ugly little seeds of
learning, sown in us against our will, spring up beautiful, free and
unrecognized in the playground of the mind.”
The metaphor is precise in
my case. A friend and I in grade school often laughed convulsively by making faces and obscene gestures at each other. Trying to keep
our little party silent and clandestine merely intensified the laughter. Tears
flowed, faces reddened, bodies shook. (Come to think of it, viewed out of
context with the audio turned off, a person violently laughing might be
mistaken for an epileptic suffering a seizure.) Our sixth-grade teacher was a
good one and we both liked her but she was not notably susceptible to the humor
of eleven-year-olds. Santayana continues in The Realm of Spirit (1940),
the concluding volume of his tetralogy Realms of Being:
“Pure laughter is not
malicious, not scornful; it is not a triumph of one self over another, but of
the spirit over all selves. It is the joyous form of union with our defeats, in
which the spirit is victorious. The bubble once pricked, everybody stands on
homelier and firmer ground.”
Here I disagree with the
great Spanish philosopher. As we grow up, we learn that laughter can be
weaponized. Even more than criticism or reasoned disagreement, there’s nothing
a prig hates more than the subversiveness of mocking laughter. Of laughter
among kids, Santayana writes: “In passing, there is exultation at having rung
the dirge of something unreal. This pleasure is dear to children, even if a
little shrill. They, poor creatures, are being cheated so regularly by their elders,
by one another, and by their own fancies, that it is sweet to turn the tables
for once and to mock the solemn fools in return.”
Few things are funnier
than righteously costive seriousness. Take R.L. Barth’s epigram “Don’t You Know
Your Poems Are Hurtful?” (Deeply Dug In, 2003), which virtually defines
the form pioneered by Martial:
“Yes, ma’am, like KA-BAR
to the gut,
Well-tempered wit should thrust and cut
Before the victim knows what’s what;
But sometimes, lest the point be missed,
I give the bloody blade a twist.”
That takes care of the
virtue-signaling, self-approving crowd. In case the notion of Santayana as a
student of humor and even something of a humorist eludes your understanding, I cite John McCormick and
his definitive biography, George Santayana (1987):
“Some philosophers can bring a smile, William James and Ludwig Wittgenstein among them. Some, like Nietzsche, terrify, although not for the reasons he thought he was terrifying. Only Santayana can make me laugh aloud. Insofar as a biographer can determine, he was a happy man and his happiness was contagious . . . He was not elusive but fastidious, one whose distinctions were subtle but wonderfully available, and not only to specialists.”