Corvée is obscure but precisely
used, as we would expect of C.H. Sisson: “A day’s work of unpaid labour due by
a vassal to his feudal lord.” (OED)
Sisson was an English civil servant as well as a poet, and by 1962 was an under-secretary
at the Ministry of Labour. He knew the worth of work, the grind of a job, its
costs and rewards. His father had kept a clock and watch repair shop in
Bristol. The family was never prosperous. Only when his father qualified as an
optician did the family know a degree of security beyond the level of
subsistence. More than most, Sisson had reason to complain of his job stealing time
from writing. He took early retirement in 1973, at age fifty-nine, and his work
flowered. All but a few pages of Collected
Poems (1998) were written after age forty. The passage quoted above is from
his preface to In Two Minds: Guesses at
Other Writers (Carcanet, 1990). My own experience and Sisson’s confession leave
me unsympathetic to anyone who complains of not having time to read or write.
As he says elsewhere in the preface:
“Since
writing has to be about something, there
is no good writing either in prose or verse, which is not the answer to some
necessity, independent of both money and other forms of recognition. Perhaps
there may be some advantage in being forced to exercise a certain rigour even
in one’s reading. An actual preference for the best literature is probably not
so common, nor so teachable, as is sometimes alleged, but if one is so
constituted as to feel such a preference vividly, one is saved the trouble of
reading an awful lot of books. One moves habitually in distinguished company—company
distinguished for what it is and not for what is said about it. The company is,
naturally, overwhelmingly of the dead, as literature has been going on for a long
time.”
Please
don’t tell me you don’t have the time to read Gibbon. You’re a big boy now. You
can find the time.
The challenge with reading Gibbon, having now waded through the first, is devoting that much of my limited time left on one work by one author. I am enjoying it -- but have to weigh the commitment of substantial time to this one book against all the other books out there to read and re-read.
ReplyDelete