I can’t
claim to have much insight into Davenport the man. I knew him as a writer and
teacher, though never in a formal sense. With me he was always generous and
encouraging. When I reviewed his 1989 volume A Balthus Notebook (Ecco
Press), he replied with a letter of gratitude in which he didn’t exactly correct
me but expanded on what I had written. His first instinct was to share
knowledge. It was a memorable exercise in tact and courtesy. As a newspaper
reporter I had met and interviewed many “celebrities.” None was so charming and
just plain interesting as Guy Davenport.
One of the
pleasures of reading Questioning Minds: The Letters of Guy Davenport and
Hugh Kenner (Counterpoint, 2018) was learning more about his private
nature. The editor Edward M. Burns does a heroic job of annotating the
correspondence of formidably learned men. The two fat volumes in a slipcase total
2,016 pages and weigh almost eight pounds. One of the most moving and revealing
letters in the collection was written by Davenport from his hometown of
Anderson, S.C., on Feb. 21, 1964. It begins:
“I’ve been
down here—home—all week. Daddy died Wednesday; funeral this morning, Friday.”
You know a
Southerner wrote this. Davenport was thirty-six and called his father “Daddy.”
Guy Mattison Davenport had spent most of his working life as a shipping clerk
for the Railway Express Agency. Davenport describes his father’s lung cancer
and emphysema, and continues:
“We all—Mama,
my sister, and I—saw him just before he died. He was a jolly, easy sort and
everybody in town knew him, so that some 300 folk came to the funeral and an
ocean of flowers fills the house and makes a great mound on his grave. He was
64. We were always on good terms in a quiet sort of way; I never ‘rebelled’ and
he never coerced. He was always proud of my drawing and my education, and I
reciprocated by taking seriously his hobbies—an impressive collection of Indian
weaponry and utensils, trees and flowers, fervent expeditions to visit
everything historical and antiquarian.”
And there we
have the origin of Davenport’s finest essay, “Finding” (The Geography of the
Imagination, 1981), which begins:
“Every
Sunday afternoon of my childhood, once the tediousness of Sunday school and the
appalling boredom of church were over with, corrosions of the spirit easily
salved by the roast beef, macaroni pie, and peach cobbler that followed them,
my father loaded us all into the Essex, later the Packard, and headed out to
look for Indian arrows. That was the phrase, ‘to look for Indian arrows.”
Children detect nothing different in their own families: I can’t remember
noticing anything extraordinary in our family being the only one I knew of that
devoted every Sunday afternoon to amateur archaeology.”
In the
essay, Davenport goes on to trace his artistic interests and attentiveness to
detail to these childhood rambles: “Our understanding was that the search was
the thing, the pleasure of looking.” In a metaphoric nutshell, that was his
credo. Davenport continues in his letter to Kenner:
“I chose I John 4: 17-21 for his eulogy—the minister thought a scholarly son ought to set
the tone of the sermon. He could only have lived in terrible pain, and we are
thankful for the mercy that gave him a swift death. Mama has been beautifully
brave, and Southern custom has kept us distracted from raw grief—e.g.,
twenty-three dinners ‘brought in’ yesterday: Homeric, or even Tlinkit Eskimo,
generosity.”
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