“He
looks like the sort of person who takes pride in his ability to get things
done. His skin is pale (as though he spends most of his time indoors), his gaze
penetrating, and his expression formidable—a poker face that reveals nothing. He
could be plotting against his enemies, reading the mind of the king [Henry
VIII], or preparing a brief for the law courts.”
I
gazed at Holbein’s painting and read Dr. Cole’s gloss while sitting in the
hospital waiting room, waiting to have blood drawn. The magazine selection was
narrow – JAMA, People – so I was
pleased to see the hospital encourages customers to consult the profession’s best-known
publication, a sort of Consumer Reports
for the halt and lame. More than twenty years ago, covering medicine for a
newspaper in upstate New York, I subscribed to JAMA and read everything in it I came close to understanding.
Despite the noun-rich jargon and its embrace of political correctness, I enjoyed
the journal’s veneer of William Osler-like civility and learning.
In
the same issue as Cole’s essay, in the “Humanities” section, JAMA
publishes under the rubric “Poetry and Medicine” a poem by Joannie Kervran Stangeland,
"Mantilla." I’m not sure I understand much of it but I like “An old woman said
an apple / should never be eaten alone. / Could this be Biblical?” The
question, I assume, is rhetorical. Stangeland concludes with “Later you can set
out the Manzanillas.” The last word, from the Spanish for “little apples,”
refers to a Spanish sherry.
In
“Shaker Light,” an essay collected in The
Hunter Gracchus (1996), Guy Davenport recalls the entwined apple and pear
trees that stood in a yard around the corner from his house in Lexington, Ky.,
growing in a “double spiral.” Throughout his work, Davenport treats apple and
pear as primal symbols embedded in Western culture. In the Shaker essay he
writes, “Apple is the symbol of the Fall, pear of Redemption. Apple is the
world, pear heaven. Apple is tragic.” Like Joyce, Davenport venerates true
symbols, and treats them with the respect due reality. He concludes the essay
with these lines:
“The
day before yesterday this intertwined apple and pear were in full bloom. In
every season these trees have been lovely, in autumn with their fruit, in
winter a naked grace, in summer a round green puzzle of two kinds of leaves;
but in spring they have always been a glory of white, something like what I
expect an angel to look like when I see one. But I shall not see these trees
again. Some developer has bought the property and cut down the embracing apple
and pear, in full bloom, with a power saw, the whining growl of which is surely
the language of devils at their business, which is to cancel creation.”
Born
Nov. 23, 1927, Davenport died on this date, Jan. 4, in 2005. I don’t have it here,
but in a letter he wrote to me around 1991 after I’d sent him the draft of an
essay I was working on, Guy reminded me not to be beholden to anyone, not even
to my own “mind-forg’d manacles,” only to the words. David Myers puts it like
this in Thursday’s barn-burner of a post:
“For
the writer (whose best readers are among the dead), freedom is an absolute.”
2 comments:
Hello and happy new year Patrick Kurp. I have commented and mailed before and you were kind enough to respond. Not having read any Davenport before, where should I begin? I have a birthday coming up and need to drop some hints around here. The price on "Geography" (out of print?) is going up, it seems. I live less than 100 miles from Lexington. Do you think his books may be easier to find there? Knowing the main interest of the area, perhaps not. Anyway -- cheers for the new year and thank you for your ongoing effort to make me a better reader and writer. Edward Bauer
First, I second Edward Bauer's appreciation of Patrick's periodic responses to comments.
More important, I hope the medical procedure went well and that recovery is swift and complete.
Finally, I share Edward's interest in where one should begin with Davenport. Hopefully, Patrick, you will devote a post to this in the not too distant future.
Post a Comment