Says Imlac in Dr. Johnson’s
The History of Rasselas, Prince of Abissinia (1759):
“Ignorance, when it is
voluntary, is criminal; and he may be properly charged with evil who refused to
learn how he might prevent it.”
Voluntary is the operative word. To
choose ignorance, to remain in darkness when the stakes are high, or to proudly
parade our incomprehension, is, if not evil, at least irritating. Most ignorance
is not voluntary, and the more we learn, the more our involuntary ignorance is
revealed to us. Some of us will never know enough. I am mechanically ignorant
and couldn’t explain with any precision how sewage treatment, the human spleen
and the internal combustion engine work. On a more trivial level, I don’t know the
rules of football and cricket (or any other sport, for that matter), and remain
obstinately monolingual.
I’ve concluded that Philip
Larkin’s “How Distant” (High Windows, 1974) is, in part, about ignorance
– of the future, of the motivations of others. It’s also about “being young,” a
time when some of us are ignorant of our own ignorance, setting us up for future
embarrassment. Ignorance can be a goad to imagination. The lines “. . . watching
/ The green shore past the salt-white cordage / Rising and falling” remind me of
Conrad glimpsing Latin America from aboard a ship and turning his brief citing
into his greatest novel, Nostromo. Larkin gives us several such glimpses
that leave the spectator filling in the gaps in his knowledge: “When the chance
sight / Of a girl doing her laundry in the steerage / Ramifies endlessly.” As
usual, Larkin’s choice of verb is perfect. The scene recalls Flaubert’s Frédéric Moreau spying a beautiful
woman from a distance, briefly, and remembering her for the rest of his life.
Only after reading “How
Distant” did I remember that Larkin also wrote a poem titled “Ignorance” (The
Whitsun Weddings, 1964), which concludes:
“Even to wear such
knowledge --for our flesh
Surrounds us with its own
decisions--
And yet spend all our life
on imprecisions,
That when we start to die
Have no idea why.”
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