That drone you hear – that pedal point reminiscent of hornets in a jar -- is the whining of America. It never ceases. Complaint has replaced – what? baseball? stoicism? – as the national pastime. We have become a nation of shameless kvetchers. “Complaint quickly tires,” Dr. Johnson reminds us, “however elegant or however just.” Gratitude, expressions of thanks for having more good fortune than most of us deserve, is now judged in bad taste.
Elizabeth Conquest last
year edited her late husband’s Collected Poems (Waywiser, 2020). A
writer can only dream of having so devoted a spouse. Now she is editing an
edition of Robert Conquest’s letters, a volume she expects to total more than 1,000
pages. Liddie sent me birthday wishes on Tuesday and wrote:
“A cousin asked if all
this editing made me sad, but it just keeps Bob close. I told her when I think
about our life together, Robert Herrick's poem ‘The Coming of Good Luck’ sums
it up:
“So good luck came, and on
my roof did light,
Like noiseless snow, or as
the dew of night :
Not all at once, but
gently, as the trees
Are by the sunbeams
tickled by degrees.”
Readers like me who know Robert
Conquest only from a distance through his roles as poet and historian still mourn
his passing in 2015 at age ninety-eight. His documentation of Stalin’s crimes
helped change the world. Of how many writers can we honestly say that? We can’t
presume to feel Liddie’s loss, though like her husband she is clearly no
whiner. The truest way to honor any dead writer is to read him. Liddie not only
reads her husband but sees to it that the world can do the same. As historian,
Conquest recounts a century’s atrocities. As poet, he has a gift for enjoyment –
of women, poetry, the natural world, science, freedom. It’s his job to celebrate,
as in “One Way to Look at It”:
“The huge aches they may
pant beneath
Should not make poets grind
their teeth.
Nor herd into the
structured line
The panics of the rooting
swine.
Terror and filth subsumed
in verse
Must not fall back as
shriek or curse:
Unvital and discharging
rant,
The lazy egoism of Cant.
“The cipher of a broken
speech
Leaves much beyond the
infant’s reach,
For language of the
fullest themes
Is not disrupted into
screams.
--The Greeks excluding
from the stage
The squalid orgasms of
that rage,
The essence of that bloody
hand
Struck generalized, yet
still more grand.
“Women, knowledge,
landscape, art
Make the good elations
start.
With these for power the
verse may thrust
Strength on the politics
of lust;
View with, not blindness
but contempt,
The stinking bilges of the
dreamt;
Till, all proportions
manifest,
All high potentials
starred and stressed,
Consummately impersonal
Life clangs through art,
one lambent bell.”
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