“Extroverts
abuse us, but there is no need to reply in kind since the present turn of
events will do the job for us. They will suffer. We will have no trouble
maintaining our social distance. We have rich inner lives and welcome the
opportunity to have an excuse to withdraw from the idle talkers, the unserious,
the spiritless, and the superficial. Call it the Introvert Advantage.”
Among
introverted writers (which ought to be but is not an oxymoron), William Cowper
is our tutelary saint. One of nature’s “Isolatoes” (as Ishmael called the crew
of the Pequod), he was the most gregarious of letter writers. He
befriended hares, guinea pigs, goldfinches and a former slaver. In “Retirement”
he paraphrases la Bruyère and writes:
“I praise
the Frenchman, his remark was shrewd,—
How sweet,
how passing sweet is solitude!
But grant me
still a friend in my retreat,
Whom I may
whisper, solitude is sweet.”
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