“I value myself upon this, that there is nothing of the old man in my conversation. I am now sixty-eight, and I have no more of it than at twenty-eight.”
The conversation of men
and women grows tiresome with age, a ceaseless recycling of complaints, regrets,
pointless stories and self-importance. That’s the conventional view and there’s
evidence to back it up. We’ve all known old people who rattle on too long, forcing
us to invent plausible excuses for leaving the room. But let’s be honest: youth
is no guarantee of scintillating conversation. I meet a lot of students and
only rarely does one of them speak knowledgeably, articulately and with wit. Too
often their conversation turns into a ritualized pas de deux of awesome’s
and cool’s. Let’s be honest again: many old bores were once young and
middle-aged bores. Senescence isn’t always the explanation.
One of history’s imposing talkers
is Dr. Johnson, who delivered the passage quoted above on April 30, 1778, as
recounted by Boswell. The Life of Johnson is a quilt of the old man’s conversations.
It’s significant that Johnson would choose, among his many gifts, to brag of his
conversational prowess. One of life’s sweetest pleasures, conversation in our
day has dried up and blown away. The causes are many but loss of civility and a general
absence of cultural knowledge must be chief among them. I turn sixty-eight
today and hope there is “nothing of the old man in my conversation,” if that implies
earnest, self-centered, repetitive dullness.
I used to brag that I wouldn’t live to see thirty, and I was well on the way to fulfilling that prophecy. No one is more surprised than I that I have reached this age and remain reasonably intact. I’ve never known what it meant to feel one’s age, even when young. I live with more pain than before but that doesn’t seem pertinent. Mentally I feel more alive. I saw my primary-care doctor recently and we talked about aging. She’s thirty-five, roughly half my age. What do I like about getting old? she asked. A new equanimity, I told her. I have a better notion of what is important and what is irrelevant. And what do I most dislike? The death of friends and acquaintances with whom I would like to resume conversations. An epigram by James Russell Lowell, “Sixty-Eighth Birthday” (1889), speaks for me:
“As life runs on, the road grows strange
With faces new, and near
the end
The milestones into
headstones change,
’Neath every one a friend.”
Happy birthday, Patrick! May there be many more years to come. (I speak for myself as well, as I'm just ten days younger than you, being a Guy Fawkes Day baby!)
ReplyDeleteHappy Birthday and another thank you for the continuing gift of this website, a daily source of enjoyment and edification.
ReplyDeleteBest wishes from another 68-year-old. Agree with all your points here, and glad to be reminded of the Johnson quote. Sixty-eight is a great age to read, to write, and welcome each morning.
ReplyDeleteHappy Birthday Patrick and many more of them.
ReplyDeleteI have just two months to go to the 68 milestone.
Reading Anecdotal Evidence is a daily pleasure.
Thank you so much.
John
Galway, Ireland
A very happy birthday to you, Patrick. Hope it was awesome and cool.
ReplyDelete"The best part of the art of living is knowing how to grow old gracefully"
ReplyDeleteEric Hoffer
Happy Birthday, Patrick
Patrick, I can only echo what others have said. You are a constant source of joy, stimulation and surprise. All the best, Arthur (from Glasgow)
ReplyDeleteBelated Happy Birthday, Patrick. There’s plenty to look forward to. I turned 79 a couple of weeks ago.
ReplyDelete