Friday, February 05, 2021

'Little Effect After Much Labour?'

Like any adolescent, Anecdotal Evidence – she turns fifteen today – is ungainly and not always sure of herself but reliably charming when it counts. She is strong and wary of longueurs, and sees the ridiculous in most human beings, including herself. As Max Beerbohm told Lord David Cecil: “Only the insane take themselves quite seriously.” AE works hard to have solid values that would make any sane parent proud: pleasure in laughter, devotion to family and work, gratitude for friends and good books. A blog is a temperamental thing, given to disappointment one day and exaltation the next. It’s a modest effort, fated never to change the world and not interested in doing so.  

 

With a mingling of pride and humility, Jane Austen, the wittiest of women, adopted the déclassé sailor’s hobby of scrimshaw as the emblem of her art. In an 1816 letter to her nephew, a would-be novelist who had misplaced a manuscript, the author of small, perfect novels writes:

 

“What should I do with your strong, manly, spirited Sketches, full of Variety & Glow? — How could I possibly join them on to the little bit (two Inches wide) of Ivory on which I work with so fine a Brush, as produces little effect after much labour?”

 

I have excellent readers. Some write comments which often prompt my desire to reply. But the comments section is the reader’s exclusive realm. I’ve had my say. I would love to meet you but can’t without an email address. Write, please, so we can talk. Heed Sterne’s suggestion at the start of Chapter XI in the second volume of Tristram Shandy:

 

“Writing, when properly managed, (as you may be sure I think mine is) is but a different name for conversation. As no one, who knows what he is about in good company, would venture to talk all; -- so no author, who understands the just boundaries of decorum and good breeding, would presume to think all: The truest respect which you can pay to the reader's understanding, is to halve this matter amicably, and leave him something to imagine, in his turn, as well as yourself.” 

7 comments:

Tim Guirl said...

Congratulations on your 15th anniversary writing this blog. I've been reading it for most of those years. It reminds me, too, that at about this same time 15 years ago, I was diagnosed with prostate cancer. I'm happy to still be here reading.

Faze said...

Read AE every day with interest and pleasure. The archives are a browser's delight. Sorry to have been such a late comer, discovering AE through an unexpected Three Stooges reference on Cynthia Haven.

mike zim said...

15 years, top marks, for my favorite blog.
Enjoy your work daily, and look forward to many more.
You make frequent appearances in my commonplace book. This one, from May 2010, is one of the earliest.

"So large a part of human life passes in a state contrary to our natural desires, that one of the principal topics of moral instruction is the art of bearing natural calamities. And such is the certainty of evil, that it is the duty of every man to furnish his mind with those principles that may enable him to act under it with decency and propriety."

Samuel Johnson, The Rambler, July 7, 1750

James said...

References like that to Tristram Shandy are what makes this a blog that I look forward to reading. Congratulations on your longevity in this endeavor.

MMc said...

Thanks Patrick for your wise and witty blog. I have learned so much from you over the past 15 years. I think I learned of you from Terry Teachout? Still reading regularly and often going back and rereading your essays.
Congratulations!

Thomas Parker said...

Happy anniversary! AE is a daily destination for me, and I appreciate it and you.

-Z. said...

Feliz quincieñera to my favourite blog. I've been reading it for the past 4 or 5 years and it has brought me much pleasure while considerably lengthening my reading lists. Thank you, Mr. Kurp.