“Common
natures do not suffice me. Good people, as they are called, won't serve; I want
individuals. I am made up of queer points, and I want so many answering
needles.”
Straight autobiography,
of course, but also a distillation of true friendship. This odd, stammering,
gin-soaked antiquarian bachelor understood non-consanguineous kinship. The letter begins with a death knell, a tally of
the recent dead: “Every
departure destroys a class of sympathies.” Lamb understands grief and its
insidious nature, and manages to find the comic in it:
“The
going-away of friends does not make the remainder more precious. It takes so
much from them, as there was a common link. A, B, and C make a party. A dies. B
not only loses A, but all A's part in C. C loses A's part in B, and so the
alphabet sickens by subtraction of interchangeables.”
1 comment:
Thanks for bringing this.
Lewis 1988, p. 61, cites this but gives no reference except
mentioning that it is from Lamb
(Lewis, C. S. 1988: The Four Loves. Orlando, fl: Harcourt)
and most friendship scholars only qoute the place in Lewis.
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