Finally, a readable
article in The New York Review of Books. That hasn’t happened at least since
the death of V.S. Pritchett in 1997. Wyatt Mason portrays Guy Davenport as an
industrious correspondent in "An Epistolary Critic." “[A]s I came to learn, and
was not surprised to learn," Mason writes, "Davenport would reply to anyone who wrote him,”
including me. Mason tells us of the Davenport collection at the University of
Texas at Austin’s Harry Ransom Center:
“Between 1944 and his
death at age seventy-seven, Davenport amassed . . . more than 2,300
correspondents. They amount to what the Ransom Center calls, hyperbolically but
not unjustifiably, ‘a twentieth-century publisher’s rolodex.’”
This suggests Guy was a
small-d democrat, a virtuoso of what Michael Oakeshott calls conversation, “in
which the participants are not engaged in an inquiry or a debate; there is no
‘truth’ to be discovered, no proposition to be proved, no conclusion sought.
They are not concerned to inform, to persuade, or to refute one another, and
therefore the cogency of their utterances does not depend upon their all
speaking in the same idiom; they may differ without disagreeing.”
I had a small but highly
valued acquaintance with Guy. I interviewed him by telephone in 1988 for a
profile I was writing of Paul Metcalf, a writer and the great-grandson of
Herman Melville who lived in the Berkshires of Massachusetts. Metcalf’s best
book, Genoa, appeared in 1965 and received two reviews – one by Guy, the other
by William H. Gass. Both loved it. In our first conversation, after I
identified myself as a reporter for the newspaper in Albany, N.Y., Davenport
mentioned he had been reading Francis Parkman’s description of the Indian
massacre at Schenectady. What was the city like today? I would come to learn
that Guy, in private life as in his writing, was endlessly curious and generous
with his learning – a natural-born teacher in the old-fashioned sense.
I quickly wrote him a fan
letter and Guy as quickly replied – correcting my spelling of Edgar “Allen”
Poe and a sloppy reference I had made to Goethe. Coming from Guy, what in
another professor might come across as bullying pedantry felt like knowledge shared.
I knew he wasn’t scoring cheap points or putting me in my place. He wanted me
to know some of what he knew, and this communion of knowledge, not merely with
his students at the University of Kentucky, gave him immense, quiet pleasure.
We corresponded
sporadically for several years, and I am even more grateful for this exchange
now than I was then, having learned of the immense number of people with whom
he exchanged letters. In June 1990, a friend and I took an open-ended trip
across the Midwest, starting from upstate New York. We camped outside
Lexington, Ky., and the next morning I visited Guy at his home at 621 Sayre
Ave. He was pleased with a review I had written of his latest book, A Balthus
Notebook. In a letter he had already told me, “You probably make it out to be a better book than it actually is; I’m not complaining.” Pro forma modesty? I'm not sure.
At his home we spoke of Montaigne and Robert Burton. He showed me a
painting he had recently made of Gertrude Stein. I felt privileged to be in the
artist’s studio for a private showing. Davenport wrote me (he was a master of
flattery you hoped was true): “You paid more attention to my paintings than
five other people together. Most folks look the other way, and change the
subject.” I told him that the night before, while doing laundry at the
campground, I had been reading the hefty, black Library of America edition of Walt Whitman. A teenage boy approached, asked to see the book, I obliged, and the
kid said, “We have a book, too, you know – The Book of Mormon.” Guy laughed
until he wept.
On February 3, 1990, Guy
wrote to me, after I sent him an obituary/column I had written following Samuel
Beckett’s death: “Thanks for the Beckett obit. Good touch, the [Vaclav] Havel
[to whom Beckett dedicated his play Catastrophe (1984)]. I imagine George Bush
could not identify Sam even as a writer, much less as our greatest since Joyce.
(is it known that GB has ever read a book?)”
I had been reading Guy, at
first in such journals as The Hudson Review, since the 1970s. I remember the
delight I experienced in 1981 when by chance I saw a brand-new copy of Guy’s
The Geography of the Imagination (North Point Press) in the window of a lesbian
bookstore in Manhattan. Nine years later, Guy would sign my copy of the essay
collection along with Apples and Pears (North Point Press, 1984), a collection
of stories. Mason glosses Guy’s intent in all of his work:
“Geography provides an
education in the same good-humored voice as the letters, refined for the varied
subjects of the essays, all of which, despite their variety, can be said to be
about the same thing: finding. Davenport’s essays are a set of paths that lead
us to places we haven’t been. All it took, he said, was an open eye. ‘I was
never trained to argue,’ Davenport told me. ‘I only observe.’ But observation
requires curiosity, and one of the remarkable features of Davenport’s
essays—which overwhelmingly explicate ‘difficult’ modernist texts by Joyce and
Pound, though they are no less interested in Welty, Joyce Kilmer, and Tarzan—is
how his writing moves the reader into darknesses in their knowledge that yield
to illumination. A text is revealed to be a cave into which an intelligence has
descended, by torchlight, to make marks that, once discovered, will require
some work to see: an inversion of Plato’s gloomy allegory.”
An illustration of
Oakeshott’s point that two people engaged in conversation “may differ
without disagreeing”: Guy’s devotion to writers I find repellant, such as Ezra
Pound and Charles Olson. It didn’t seem to matter that our thinking so radically
differed. I am even more grateful for our exchange now than I was then, having
learned of the immense number of people with whom he corresponded. At his home
in Lexington he told me of his delight when he learned that Franz Kafka’s eyes
were blue.
As a gift I brought him a
duplicate copy of Steven Millhauser’s latest story collection, The Barnum Museum (Poseidon
Press, 1990). Subsequently I sent him my review, which he
thanked me for in a July 7 note. His letter dated July 20, 1990, must have
been in response to me congratulating him on winning the MacArthur Fellowship:
“Thanks! As for who’s responsible, at least three have claimed credit so far.
Many committees chew through the lists, I believe.”
And a concluding
suggestion: “Why don’t you do a survey of contemporary writers, in the manner
of Hazlitt (and parallel to Ved Mehta’s ‘Fly and the Fly Bottle’)? JC Oates
writing three books at once, Paul [Metcalf] in his little house. That is,
subvert the worn-out interview format and go for the writer as human. ALL
observation.”
Mason distills an
essential part of Guy’s method: “Trained not to argue but to look.” Which is
much of the reason Guy, in person and in print, was almost never boring – a
rare quality in my experience.