No, I don’t.
I’ve never known profound depression. I’ve lost friends to it. I know it has
destroyed some fine writers. Through a happy serendipity of genetics, I
suppose, I am immune – so far. Charles Lamb is writing to his Quaker friend Bernard Barton on Jan. 9, 1824, composing a five-hundred word tour de force in
celebration of melancholia. He conflates two lines spoken by Falstaff in Act I,Scene 2 of Henry IV, Part II: “And I hear, moreover, his Highness is
fall’n into same whoreson apoplexy,” he tells the Lord Chief Justice, and then
adds: “This apoplexy, as I take it, is a kind of lethargy, please your
lordship, a kind of sleeping in the blood, a tingling.” Lamb continues:
“I am
flatter than a denial or a pancake— . . .—duller than a country stage when the
actors are off it—a cypher—an O—I acknowledge life at all, only by an
occasional convulsional cough, and a permanent phlegmatic pain in the chest—I
am weary of the world—Life is weary of me—My day is gone into Twilight and I
don’t think it worth the expence of candles—my wick hath a thief in it, but I
can’t muster courage to snuff it—I inhale suffocation—I can’t distinguish veal
from mutton—nothing interests me—”
A friend
asks if the COVID-19 shutdown “depresses” me? Has it taken an emotional toll? Not
at all. I’m grateful for good health, loved ones nearby, books to read and time
to write. Complaining would seem indecent with so many sick and dying.
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