Sophisticates don’t get excited when meeting their heroes. Our veneer of coolness and suavity mustn’t be ruffled. At least that’s what I thought when meeting Count Basie, Sonny Rollins and B.B. King. But I was much younger and preoccupied with my “image.” Today I would gush and sputter if I could meet those guys again. In contrast, here’s a star-struck Louise Bogan after meeting T.S. Eliot:
“I sat beside the Great
Man at lunch; and I looked into his Golden Eye! How beautiful is the
combination of physical beauty (even in slight decay), high qualities of mind
and heart, and perfect humility. We talked, during the end of the entrée
and through the coffee and ice cream!”
Bogan sounds like a bobby soxer
swooning over Frankie. She’s writing to her friend Morton Zabel on November 28,
1948, after attending a luncheon thrown by the Fellows in American Literature of
the Library of Congress. On that occasion they voted to
give Ezra Pound the first Bollingen Prize.
“Of form, and Youth’s fear
of form; of rhythm (we got it back to the heartbeat and the breath); of the
true novelist talent; of Henry Miller and little magazines; of Brancusi and
modern architecture (‘who wants to live in a machine?’) and, finally, of the cat
poems! [Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats (1939)].”
Bogan describes Eliot’s
manner during the Fellows’ meetings as “v. quiet, shy, reserved. He smokes
incessantly, and at one point took time off to sharpen a pencil (with a
pen-knife, in his lap). He looks quite frail, really; but what beauty. Well, it
is all too late and too sad—but I must love him in a mild, distant sisterly
way.”
Two months earlier, Eliot
had turned sixty. Bogan was fifty-one. She opens her letter to Zabel with the
first stanza of Andrew Marvell’s “The Definition of Love”:
“My love is of a birth as
rare
As ’tis for object strange
and high;
It was begotten by Despair
Upon Impossibility.”
That poem always reminds
me, because of six-syllable “Impossibility,” of two poems by Emily Dickinson
(here and here). Bogan closes her letter with Marvell’s final Stanza:
“Therefore the love which
us doth bind,
But Fate so enviously
debars,
Is the conjunction of the
mind,
And opposition of the
stars.”
[You can find the Bogan’s letter
in A Poet’s Prose: Selected Writings of Louise Bogan (ed. Mary Kinzie,
Swallow Press/Ohio University Press, 2005).]
When I was finished with my army basic training, the start of my specialty school at another post was postponed for several weeks, during which time I stayed on in my training company as an assistant to my drill sergeant, a man who I had thought was certifiably insane. I found that the contrary was true; he was a highly intelligent man putting on a carefully considered performance. I will never forget the awe in his voice - and my surprise - when he told me about the time he met his greatest hero. General Patton? Charles Manson? Attila the Hun? No.
ReplyDeleteGroucho Marx.