Here is the first stanza of Anthony Hecht’s “Upon the Death of George Santayana” (The Hard Hours, 1967), his elegy for the Spanish-born philosopher:
“Down every passage of the
cloister hung
A dark wood cross on a
white plaster wall;
But in the court were
roses, not as tongue
Might have them, something
of Christ’s blood grown small,
But just as roses, and at
three o’clock
Their essences, inseparably
bouqueted,
Seemed more than Christ’s last breath, and rose to mock
An elderly man for whom the Sisters prayed.”
In 1941 at age seventy-seven, Santayana entered the Clinica della Piccola Compagna di Maria in Rome, a hospital-clinic run by a Catholic order of nuns. He remained there until his death eleven years later. As a thinker, Santayana recognized Lucretius and Spinoza as precursors and praised “naturalistic piety.” Born and raised a Catholic, he was an atheist:
“What heart can know
itself? The Sibyl speaks
Mirthless and unbedizened things,
but who
Can fathom her intent? Loving
the Greeks,
He whispered to a nun who
strove to woo
His spirit unto God by
prayer and fast,
‘Pray that I go to Limbo,
if it please
Heaven to let my soul
regard at last
Democritus, Plato and
Socrates.’
Last week I quoted Guy Davenport recommending to Hugh Kenner the first chapter of Santayana’s Realm
of Essence (1927), the first volume in his tetralogy Realms of Being
(published in one volume in 1942). The work begins: “The modern or romantic man
is an adventurer; he is less interested in what there may be to find than in
the lure of the search and in his hopes, guesses, or experiences in searching.
Essence is perfectly indifferent to being discovered and unaffected by the
avenue through which any discoverer may approach it; and for that very reason,
the explorer ignores it, and asks what it can possibly be.”
“And so it was. The river,
as foretold,
Ran darkly by; under his
tongue he found
Coin for the passage; the
ferry tossed and rolled;
The sages stood on their
appointed ground,
Sighing, all as foretold.
The mind was tasked;
He had not dreamed that so
many had died.
‘But where is Alcibiades,”
he asked,
‘The golden roisterer, the
animal pride?’
Echoes here of Dante and
Eliot. In his first published prose work, The Sense of Beauty (1896),
while discussing Othello, Santayana writes: "Love makes us poets, and the
approach of death should make us philosophers. When a man knows that his life
is over, he can look back upon it from a universal standpoint. He has nothing
more to live for, but if the energy of his mind remains unimpaired, he will
still wish to live, and, being cut off from his personal ambitions, he will
impute to himself a kind of vicarious immortality by identifying himself with
what is eternal. He speaks of himself as he is, or rather as he was. He sums
himself up, and points to his achievement. This I have been, says he, this I
have done.”
“Those sages who had
spoken of the love
And enmity of things, how
all things flow,
Stood in the light no life
is witness of,
And Socrates, whose wisdom
was to know
He did not know, spoke
with a solemn mien,
And all his wonderful
ugliness was lit,
‘He whom I loved for what
he might have been
Freezes with traitors in
the ultimate pit.’”
Referring to Dante in Three
Philosophical Poets: Lucretius, Dante, and Goethe (1910), Santayana tells us: “Poetry is an
attenuation, a rehandling, an echo of crude experience; it is itself a vision
of things at arm’s length. Language is made palpable and experience voluminous
in poetry.”
George Santayana was born
on this date, December 16, in 1863, and died on September 26, 1952.
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