“Fog that
you might cut with a knife all the way from London to Newbury. This fog does
not wet things. It is rather a smoke than a fog. There are no two
things in this world; and, were it not for fear of Six-Acts (the ‘wholesome
restraint’ of which I continually feel) I might be tempted to carry my
comparison further; but, certainly, there are no two things in this world
so dissimilar as an English and a Long Island autumn.—These fogs are certainly
the white clouds that we sometimes see aloft.”
Inevitably
we think of the second paragraph of the first chapter of Bleak House
(1853), the one beginning “Fog everywhere.” Cobbett is a political, non-ideological writer who doesn’t
clutter his sentences with politics. He hints without hammering. His prose is
composed in the plain style. His forbears among writers are Swift, Defoe and Bunyan.
In the first sentence, thirteen of its fifteen words are monosyllables, and both
exceptions are place names. In contrast, Browne’s prose is often rococo in its extravagance.
Here are the opening sentences of Urn Burial, to use its customary
modern title:
“When the
Funerall pyre was out, and the last valediction was over, men took a lasting
adieu of their interred Friends, little expecting the curiosity of future ages
should comment upon their ashes, and having no old experience of the duration
of their Reliques, held no opinion of such after-considerations.”
In a sense,
Browne has no forbears, except perhaps the King James Bible. English is clay in
his hands, and he shapes it confidently and with delight. He was the most
prolific neologist in the history of the language. In the OED he is
cited 788 times for the first appearance of words in English. Among writers most often
cited by the Dictionary, Browne ranks seventieth. By his customary
standards, the sentence quoted is plain-spoken and contains no rare or exotic
words.
Moss doesn’t
limit his samples of good prose to a hidebound understanding of “literature.” He
quotes a passage from Anthony Collett’s The Changing Face of England (1926)
that Auden included in A Certain World: A Commonplace Book (1970), and
another from The Ocean (1955) by F.D. Ommanney. Both are wonderful to read. To
his credit, Moss also cites the essays of V.S. Pritchett, the greatest book
critic of the twentieth century. Moss concludes his digression on prose with a
brief, suggestive observation:
“The
half-seen, the barely glimpsed, if they make an impression, are more usable, usually,
than the familiar. Though sometimes if the right connection is made, a place
one has been steeped in comes alive.”
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