Call
it second-hand nostalgia: a longing for another’s longing for a past we (and
they) never knew. I feel nothing comparable for anything in my personal past,
and I say that not in a spirit of complaint but with the recognition that my experience
has merely served to make me who I am. The nostalgia I’m trying to describe is
probably rare, though it occurs with some frequency among dedicated readers and
perhaps moviegoers. Let’s distinguish it from false nostalgia, about which Terry Teachout has written: “The English language needs a word whose definition would
be `nostalgia for that which one has not experienced.’” I knew instinctively
what Terry meant, but I mean something else.
In
A Man Could Stand Up (1926), the third
novel in Ford Madox Ford’s tetralogy Parade’s
End, Christopher Tietjens describes another officer, Capt. McKechnie, as a “fellow
[who] spread seventeenth-century atmosphere across the landscape over which the
sun’s rays were beginning to flood a yellow wash.” Ford continues: “What had
become of the seventeenth century? And Herbert and Donne and Crashaw and
Vaughan, the Silurist? .
. . Sweet day so cool, so calm, so bright, the bridal of the earth and sky!”
And then this:
“The
only satisfactory age in England! . . . Yet what chance had it to-day? Or, still
more, to-morrow? In the sense that the age of, say, Shakespeare had a chance.
Or Pericles! or Augustus!”
Even
as nostalgia envelopes him, Tietjens questions it, almost mocking his susceptibility
to such longings. But the longing returns as Tietjens awaits another German
offensive:
“The
land remains . . . It remains! . . . At that same moment the dawn was wetly
revealing; over there in George Herbert’s parish What was it called? . . . What the devil was
its name? Oh, Hell! .
. . Between Salisbury and Wilton . . . The tiny church . . . But he refused to
consider the plough-lands, the heavy groves, the slow highroad above the church
that the dawn was at that moment wetly revealing--until he could remember that
name. . . He refused to consider that, probably even to-day, that land ran to .
. . produced the stock of . . . Anglican sainthood. The quiet thing!”
Finally,
Tietjens recalls the name of Herbert’s parish:
“The
name Bemerton suddenly came on to his tongue. Yes, Bemerton, Bemerton, Bemerton
was George Herbert's parsonage. Bemerton, outside Salisbury...The cradle of the
race as far as our race was worth thinking about. He imagined himself standing
up on a little hill, a lean contemplative parson, looking at the land sloping
down to Salisbury spire. A large, clumsily bound seventeenth-century testament,
Greek, beneath his elbow. . . Imagine standing up on a hill! It was the
unthinkable thing there!”
The
scene is powerfully poignant. Ford sets it up as a series of lenses in a
telescope peering three centuries from the Western Front into Herbert’s day. The
effect is heightened if we recognize the opening lines of Herbert’s “The Virtue”:
“Sweet day, so cool, so calm, so bright, / The bridal of the earth and sky.” In
a lecture on C.H. Sisson delivered in 1980, Geoffrey Hill looks at the same scene
that struck me recently while rereading Parade’s
End:
“The
capacity to interfuse ideas with landscape is one of the great creative
secrets: to make a tree or a field either draw out, or reciprocate, or feed
images into, the life of the mind. It is a great art we become palpably aware
of in Wordsworth; scarcely anyone does it more beautifully than George Eliot.
Ford Madox Ford, in a passage from one of the Tietjens novels, deliberately
eschews balanced reciprocity: the mind and the landscape mirroring and
stabilizing each other; shows, instead, the `wind,’ `twist,’ of the process of
memory and its blank-faced twin aphasia. Tietjens is in the trenches: his
groping for the name of George Herbert’s parish (Bemerton) is partly an
unconscious strategy to ward off shell-shocked despair and paranoia; partly the
attachment of a particular religious and political vision to the soil of
England itself; an intellectual sensuousness, a sensuousness of intellect: `But
what chance had quiet fields, Anglican sainthood, accuracy of thought,
heavy-leaved, timbered hedgerows. . . ”
Hill
notes Sisson’s frequently expressed admiration for Ford, suggests these scenes
in Parade’s End had a powerful influence
on him, and quotes lines from Sisson’s “On My Fifty-First Birthday”:
“A
great sunlit field full of lambs.
The
distant perspectives are of the patched earth
With
hedges creeping about. If I were to die now
No
need of angels to carry me to paradise.
O
Lord my God, simplify my existence.”
1 comment:
I like Hill's "intellectual sensuousness" and the references to the 17th century. It chimes well with TS Eliot's siting of the moment of the dissociation of sensibility in the English literary consciousness some time around the English Civil War.
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