So
writes a reader commenting on a recent post devoted to the work of the late Guy Davenport.
I’m not comfortable telling people what to read, and resent it when others
issue bookish orders to me. Only in the reading life am I a libertarian. Rather
than codify a Davenport curriculum, I’ll share some of my forty-year engagement
with a writer who, through words alone, became my best teacher. He was
passionately curious, learned and generous with what he knew. In his book-length poem Flowers and Leaves (1966), Davenport
writes, in a characteristic parenthesis: “(Knowledge rusts / If the mind can’t
love.)”
Davenport
(1927-2005) was a prolific writer, but a careful one. None of his works is a
vanity project, and all, even the least review or introduction, can be mined
for gems. I don’t remember the first thing by him I read, perhaps an essay or
story in a journal, though it may have been The
Intelligence of Louis Agassiz (1963), a selection from the writings of the
Swiss-born scientist and friend to Thoreau. In his thirty-page introduction, a
sort of credo for all that followed,
Davenport hints at his own sensibility:
“Agassiz
was a major figure in nineteenth-century American culture, as much a part of
our literary history as our scientific. Agassiz assumed that the structure of
the natural world was everyone’s interest, that every community as a matter of
course would collect and classify its zoology and botany. College students can
now scarcely make their way through a poem organized around natural facts [this
was half a century ago!]. Ignorance of natural history has become an aesthetic
problem in reading the arts. Thoreau, though he wondered why the very dogs did
not stop and admire turned maples, knew better what the American attitude was,
and was to be, toward natural history. Nullity.”
Davenport
assumes the unity of knowledge, making no hard, mutually exclusive distinctions
between science and art. Though he taught in universities for almost forty
years, he had none of the academic’s dull, turf-defending over-specialization.
He was no careerist. Rather, he was a teacher whose principal mode of teaching
was writing. He couldn’t fathom a man who wasn’t excited by a magnolia tree in
blossom or a passage in Ruskin. The centerpiece of his published work, its
Rosetta stone, remains The Geography of
the Imagination, an essay collection published in 1981 by North Point
Press. On my shelves sit twenty-two volumes of Davenport’s work, with some
overlap among them. Geography,
inscribed by Guy the one time I met him (“18 June 1990”), threatens to fall
apart from use. Some passages I’ve committed to memory strictly from
familiarity. This is from “Ernst Machs Max Ernst”:
“If I have
a sensibility distinct from that of my neighbors, it is simply a taste, wholly
artificial and imaginary, for distant plangencies and different harmonies in
which I can recognize as a stranger a sympathy I could not appreciate at my
elbow: songs of the Fulani, a ntumpan, male and female, of ceremonial elephant
drums of the Asantehene, dressed in silk, under a more generous sun and
crowding closer upon the symbolled and archaic embroidery of the skirts of God,
the conversations of Ernst Mach and William James, Basho on the road to the red
forests of the North, Sir Walter Scott at dinner with Mr. Hinze, his cat,
sitting by his plate.”
It’s the
personal note that carries conviction, yet a reader could never mistake this
for memoir. Some people, writing of themselves, write autobiographically in the
banal sense: this happened, then this happened. Guy presents you with a core
sample of his sensibility. “Distant plagencies” may show up as my epitaph.
The side
of Davenport’s accomplishments closest to my heart is the nonfiction. He was
our supreme essayist. The fiction is less central for me, in part because Guy,
like Borges, mingled fiction and essay. He was dismissive of his first story
collection, Tatlin! (1974), judging
it too wordy and explicit. Yet consider the final sentence of “The Dawn in
Erewhon,” the final story:
“On the
earthday July twentieth, one thousand nine hundred and sixty-nine years after
Omicron Ceti burst bright during a mighty conjunction of Jupiter, Saturn, and
Mars, the handsome, blue-eyed Command Pilot of the Eagle, Neil Armstrong, of
Ohio, stepped with his left foot onto the dust of the moon.”
Among my
favorite Davenport stories: “On Some Lines of Virgil” (Eclogues, 1981); “Fifty-Seven Views of Fujiyama” (Apples and Pears, 1984); “Belinda’s
World Tour” and “The Concord Sonata” (A
Table of Green Fields, 1993). The
one book of Guy’s I reviewed during his life was The Balthus Notebook (Ecco Press, 1989). I clipped the review from
the newspaper and mailed it to him (we had already been exchanging letters for
more than a year), and he was politely pleased with what I had written. Looking
back, I see it’s a feeble bit of writing but Guy was never less than gracious. In
The Balthus Notebook you’ll find this
corrective to theory-driven narcissism:
“A work of
art, like a foreign language, is closed to us until we learn how to read it.
Meaning is latent, seemingly hidden. There is also the illusion that the
meaning is concealed. A work of art is a structure of signs, each meaningful.
It follows that a work of art has one meaning only. For an explicator to blur
an artist’s meaning, or to be blind to his achievement, is a kind of treason, a
betrayal. The arrogance of insisting that a work of art means what you think it
means is a mistake that closes off curiosity [n.b.], perception, the
adventure of discovery.”
Of few
writers can we say to a novice: You can’t go wrong; start anywhere and enjoy
yourself. Even Shakespeare wrote Titus
Andronicus. In my experience, I always enjoy and learn something from Guy’s work, no
matter how remote it may seem from my putative interests. In “Ernst Mach Max Ernest,” writing of “the styles
I find most useful to study” (Kenner, Mandelstam, Beckett, Wyndham Lewis,
Pound, Charles Doughty), Guy writes:
“All of
these are writers who do not waste a word, who condense, pare down, and proceed
with daring synapses.”
2 comments:
How about The Geography of the Imagination, the essay "Finding" for example?
Dear Patrick, When I asked you the question I never expected this wonderful a response. Thank you for the effort you made to help me, despite your discomfort with recommendations. I have so many gaps in my reading, and following your blog has inspired me to fill in as I can. The specifics I find here are great, but it is the inspiration I appreciate the most. Thanks again. Eddie Bauer
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