Boswell in a footnote to his Life of Johnson: “Johnson, however, declared I should be a member, and invented a word upon the occasion: ‘Boswell, (said he) is a very clubbable man.’”
I forget the word clubbable
exists though I’m fond of unclubbable, which should not be understood as
a synonym for anti-social. My sense is that clubbability was more common
in the past. In his Dictionary, Johnson rather attractively defines club
as “an assembly of good fellows, meeting under certain conditions.”
After the war, my father
and his high-school friends formed a social club called the Royal Azures -- beer, a picnic in the summer, gifts for
the kids at Christmas. Both of my parents, whom I never think of as notably social,
were for many years loyal members of bowling teams. Though not formally
organized as clubs, they played canasta with one group of friends and poker
with another. The only organization I’ve ever joined was the Newspaper Guild
(AFL-CIO), and that was mandatory. I once interviewed Dan Quayle during a
breakfast meeting of the Kiwanis. The intensity of the clubbing instinct varies
significantly.
On this date, March 10, in
1711, Joseph Addison in The Spectator published an essay about the vogue
for clubs in England. “Man
is said to be a Sociable Animal,” he writes, “and, as an Instance of it, we may
observe, that we take all Occasions and Pretences of forming ourselves into
those little Nocturnal Assemblies, which are commonly known by the name of
Clubs.” Addison’s tone is amused but not exactly satirical. He assumes people with
common interests, however trivial, will gather. Here is my favorite among his
examples:
“I know a considerable
Market-town, in which there was a Club of Fat-Men, that did not come together
(as you may well suppose) to entertain one another with Sprightliness and Wit,
but to keep one another in Countenance: The Room, where the Club met, was
something of the largest, and had two Entrances, the one by a Door of a
moderate Size, and the other by a Pair of Folding-Doors. If a Candidate for
this Corpulent Club could make his Entrance through the first he was looked
upon as unqualified; but if he stuck in the Passage, and could not force his
Way through it, the Folding-Doors were immediately thrown open for his
Reception, and he was saluted as a Brother. I have heard that this Club, though
it consisted but of fifteen Persons, weighed above three Tun.”
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