“Adventure” is the ninth of the twenty-two stories that make up Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg, Ohio (1919). Anderson’s fiction is hobbled by his half-baked understanding of Freud. In this, he was not alone. He is best read when we are young. I discovered him at age seventeen. His prose can be soppy but occasionally it achieves a quality Donald Justice, writing of Poor White (1920), calls “poignancy”:
“In the spring when the
rains have passed and before the long hot days of summer have come, the country
about Winesburg is delightful. The town lies in the midst of open fields, but
beyond the fields are pleasant patches of woodlands. In the wooded places are
many little cloistered nooks, quiet places where lovers go to sit on Sunday
afternoons. Through the trees they look out across the fields and see farmers
at work about the barns or people driving up and down on the roads. In the town
bells ring and occasionally a train passes, looking like a toy thing in the
distance.”
Chekhov wrote nothing in the summer of 1888, but thought about writing a novel. He stayed at the villa of
his editor and friend Aleksi Suvorin in Feodosia, in Crimea on the Black Sea. He
was leading a “vile, lotus-eating life,” as he says in a letter to his family
written July 23-24:
“The days pass in an
endlessly replete stream, the cup of life overflows . . . Lounging about on the
beach, Chartreuse, punch, fireworks, bathing, good cheer at supper, trips,
songs – all such pleasures make the days go by so quickly that you hardly notice
them; time flies while the drowsy head nods off to the sound of the waves and
refuses to get down to work.”
Earlier that year he had
written “The Steppe.” Soon he would write “A Dreary Story” and “Gusev.” The
novel was never written.
Every year we are surprised
by summer’s passing, as though it were a fluke. We go on sensing within
us the cycle of the seasons. Howard Nemerov writes in “Summer’s Elegy” (The Blue
Swallows, 1967):
“A failing light, no
longer numinous,
Now frames the long and
solemn afternoons
Where butterflies regret
their closed cocoons.
We reach the place unripe,
and made to know
As with a sudden knowledge
that we go
Away forever . . .”
[The passages from Chekhov’s
letter can be found in Anton Chekhov: A Life in Letters (trans. Rosamund
Bartlett and Anthony Phillips, 2004).]
Strange, I thought you had written frequently about Edward Arlington Robinson, but using the search box just now turned up only two old posts, and neither one mentioned "The Sheaves," which today's reminded me of.
ReplyDeleteVisited Austin, Texas last week, and returned with gratitude to the rich, green summer canopy of Anderson's Northern Ohio.
ReplyDeleteA search of Anecdotal Evidence for “E A Robinson” turns up references and comments.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Dave. VST (vary search terms) : an old lesson I have to re-learn. Stupid 'puters.
ReplyDelete