“Samuel
Johnson has always skirted me. My parents doted on him (still do), and as a
child I had a one-line role in a playlet about Johnson’s Dictionary. But I’ve never actually looked him over, or even much
of Boswell. That’s because they seemed less artists than scholars, and
scholarship’s not my dish. So I am pleasantly surprised to be reading John
Wain’s treatise.”
“Dish”
or not, some of the best artists are bona
fide scholars. Among the moderns, consider Nabokov, J.V. Cunningham, C.H.
Sisson, Guy Davenport and Eric Ormsby. I’ve encountered others who share some
variation on Ned Rorem’s judgment in “A Cultured Winter” (An Absolute Gift: A New Diary, 1978), but have never come close to
sharing it. Dave Lull and I were talking the other day about genius, that
overused notion, and we agreed that some geniuses seem superhuman, possessing
capacities impossible for humbler beings to imagine. Chief among them are
Shakespeare and Bach. Other geniuses are more essentially human, like us but
more so. That’s Johnson’s niche. He was a genius of humanity. We can imagine
his gifts without possessing them. Shakespeare made it look easy while Johnson
labored.
Wain’s
Samuel Johnson: A Biography (1975) is
no “treatise.” Like Johnson, Wain was a working-class native of the Midlands,
with a deep affinity for the older writer. His biography appeared two years
before W. Jackson Bate’s and four before James L. Clifford’s Dictionary Johnson. Those were good
years for Johnson enthusiasts, and my timing was superb. I first read Johnson
and Boswell as a college freshman in 1970 and took to them immediately. By 1975
I had read most of their work available and much of the secondary literature.
Rorem
rightly describes Wain’s prose as “not one bit `poetic’ but straightforward,
researched, responsible,” and adds: “The lexicographer comes off not as the
usual old-time Noël Coward, but as an old-time Edmund Wilson in all his feisty
brilliance.” Rorem intends that as a compliment, but it misfires. Johnson was
nothing like Wilson in terms of scholarship, moral and spiritual profundity,
and simple human decency. In fact, Rorem seems really not to quite approve of
Johnson, or he approves only of those qualities he shares with, say, George
McGovern. He calls Johnson “a comfortable liberal, outspoken against slavery
and capital punishment and prison abuse. But there’s little `clubable’ talk of
painting or sculpture, and none whatever of music.” No, Johnson was made of sterner
stuff. He was a wit suffused with gravitas, a very rare species. In The Rambler #106, published on this date,
March 23, in 1751, Johnson writes:
“There
are, indeed, few kinds of composition from which an author, however learned or
ingenious, can hope a long continuance of fame. He who has carefully studied
human nature, and can well describe it, may with most reason flatter his
ambition .
. . It may, however, satisfy an honest and benevolent mind to have been useful,
though less conspicuous; nor will he that extends his hope to higher rewards,
be so much anxious to obtain praise, as to discharge the duty which Providence
assigns him.”
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