Two-hundred years ago this month, in October 1820, Charles Lamb published the second of his Elia essays, “Oxford in the Vacation,” in London Magazine. Lamb was working as a clerk for the East India House, where he would retire in 1825 after thirty-three years. The first Elia essay, “The South-Sea House,” dealt playfully with his job and had been published two months earlier in the same magazine. The second essay further develops the Elia persona as “a votary of the desk–a notched and cropt scrivener.” Lamb was a good employee, but he permits Elia to make fun of his clerkship and the tension it created with his literary endeavors:
“Well, I do agnize [sic]
something of the sort. I confess that it is my humour, my fancy–in the forepart
of the day, when the mind of your man of letters requires some relaxation–(and
none better than such as at first sight seems most abhorrent from his beloved
studies)–to while away some good hours of my time in the contemplation of
indigos, cottons, raw silks, piece-goods, flowered or otherwise. ‘[I]t . . . sends
you home with such increased appetite to your books . . . not to say, that your
outside sheets, and waste wrappers of foolscap, do receive into them, most
kindly and naturally, the impression of sonnets, epigrams, essays–so that the
very parings of a counting-house are, in some sort, the settings up of an
author.”
Anyone who has held down a
“day job” – the reliable sort, with a steady paycheck and benefits – while scavenging
for time to write in what remains of the day, will appreciate Elia’s bemused
quandary. His life was complicated. He had a gift for friendship. Lamb loved food and drink, and his mentally ill sister Mary. He took
his responsibilities as her caretaker (she had fatally stabbed their mother in
1796) seriously while maintaining a fulltime job and writing his poems and
essays. He enjoyed taking his annual vacations near England’s great universities
– Oxford and Cambridge. Lamb had never attended a university. He was, he writes
in the essay, “defrauded in his young years of the sweet food of academic
institution,” His biographer and editor E.V. Lucas writes:
“My own impression is that
Lamb wrote the essay at Cambridge, under the influence of Cambridge, where he
spent a few weeks in the summer of 1820, and transferred the scene to Oxford by
way of mystification. He knew Oxford, of course, but he had not been there for
some years and it was at Cambridge that he met [the poet George] Dyer and that
he saw the Milton MSS.”
Lamb gained a fallacious
reputation. He has been pigeonholed as strictly a sentimental or whimsical
writer, a favorite of schoolmasters for generations. Much humor is time- and
place-dependent, and few writers from two centuries ago can make us laugh aloud.
But Lamb is more than a verbally sophisticated clown. His near-poverty as a
child, the horrific nature of his mother’s death, his sister’s frequent “spells”
and stays in insane asylums – all contributed to a certain nobility of the
soul, a natural empathy for the cast-off and misunderstood. He was flawed. He was a drunk and expressed stupidly anti-Semitic sentiments in one of
his essays. But my favorite Lamb/Elia is the one who celebrates books, who
takes his place in the great English literary tradition we have inherited:
“What a place to be in is
an old library! It seems as though all the souls of all the writers, that have
bequeathed their labours to these Bodleians, were reposing here, as in some
dormitory, or middle state. I do not want to handle, to profane the leaves,
their winding-sheets. I could as soon dislodge a shade. I seem to inhale
learning, walking amid their foliage; and the odour of their old moth-scented coverings
is fragrant as the first bloom of those sciential apples which grew amid the
happy orchard.”
He must have been quite an influence on the young Hawthorne of the sketches.
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