Who wrote
this? Word choice is a clue, especially tracery,
borrowed from architecture. Read it superficially – skim it – and you might
mistake the passage for prose poetry, the adolescent gush of adjectives cavalierly
linked by sense. The first time I saw my name in print was in a junior high
school literary magazine. My contribution was a prose petit four titled “November.” It was composed during my mercifully brief
infatuation with Thomas Wolfe. The only specific I remember is comparing the
color of the sky to pewter, and being exceedingly pleased with the metaphor.
A more revealing
clue to the passage’s authorship is the halting cadence, pausing to clarify meaning.
Some writers lay down thick slabs of reality-prose, as hard and final as
concrete. Others, like our man above, let us in on the process, generously sharing
the cliché-resisting process of articulation.
The author is
Henry James. The source is Chap 1, “New England: An Autumn Impression,” in The American Scene (1907). There’s no
work of American nonfiction I love so much. It’s made for revisiting, like a lakeside
week in the Adirondacks, a summer vacation spot. November recurs in Chap.
VIII, “Concord and Salem,” where James revisits his past and the nation’s:
“I remember
indeed putting it to myself on the November Sunday morning, tepid and bright
and perfect for its use, through which I walked from the station under the constant
archway of the elms, as yet but indulgently thinned: would one know, for one's
self, what had formerly been the matter here, if one hadn’t happened to be able
to get round behind, in the past, as it were, and more or less understand?”
1 comment:
Any 20 year-old writer who isn't influenced by Thomas Wolfe doesn't have a heart, and any 40 year-old writer who is, doesn't have a brain.
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