Some deaths are still impossible to believe, and I don’t mean family or longtime friends. Rather, public figures distant in time and space who never knew we existed. Charles Mingus is one. For a time in the seventies his music was almost all I listened to. He died in 1979. A year later we lost Bill Evans. Two years earlier, Nabokov. Call them father-figures, not to get Freudian about it, all gone before I turned twenty-eight.
In December 1985, I read in
the New York Times of Philip Larkin’s death at age sixty-three. (“So
young,” he says, retrospectively.) I had been reading him for fifteen years as
though his poems were private correspondence intended only for my eyes. I don’t
think I had ever spoken with anyone about Larkin, but I never knew a lot of
people who read poetry. Our relationship was “personal,” unlike mine with almost
any other poet. Though death was ever his theme, his own seemed improbable.
Within two months, Clive
James published the 166-line “A Valediction for Philip Larkin” in the London
Review of Books. I was in my newspaper office in the Albany County
Courthouse when I learned of Larkin’s death. James was in Kenya. His immediate
reaction on hearing the news:
“No tears were shed.
Forgive me, but I hardly
felt a trace
Of grief. Just sudden fear
your being dead
So soon had left us
disinherited.”
Read the whole thing,
please. Here is the emotional and poetic heart of the poem:
“The seeming paradox is a
plain fact –
You brought us all
together on your own.
Your saddest lyric is a
social act.
A bedside manner in your
graveyard tone
Suggests that at the last
we aren’t alone.
“You wouldn’t have agreed,
of course. You said
Without equivocation that
life ends
With him who lived it
definitely dead
And buried, after which
event he tends
To spend a good deal less
time with his friends.”
Clive James, it’s hard to
believe, died almost two years ago, on November 24, 2019.
[James’ poem is collected
in several places, including Somewhere Becoming Rain: Collected Writings
on Philip Larkin (Picador, 2019), his final book.]
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