People no longer write letters, we are told. Digital convenience has turned handwritten or typed notes into quaint relics from another world. Do you remember the thrill of finding a personal letter in the mailbox? About sixty years ago I was a pen pal with a girl in New South Wales. It seemed miraculous that I could exchange a ten-year-old’s banalities with someone in Australia, a place as real to me as Lilliput. In the late nineteen-sixties, after a friend and I went to hear Dr. Benjamin Spock speak on Public Square in Cleveland, our picture and names appeared on the front page of the newspaper. A few days later, I received a handwritten letter on ruled paper telling me, among other things, to “go back to Sweden,” a place I had never visited. It left me thrilled and scared.
No longer will we be able
to enjoy new volumes of letters like those left us by Charles Lamb, Lord Byron,
Robert Louis Stevenson and Flannery O’Connor. We read them for their
biographical content, of course, but also for the conversational zest of the
prose – letters as literature. Just this week I received a letter from a longtime
reader, one whose name I didn’t recognize. He has posted comments on Anecdotal
Evidence but always under a pseudonym. “I knew you, of all people,” he writes,
“would enjoy getting a ‘fan letter’ the old-fashioned way.” He is correct.
Another master of the epistolary
art is William Cowper (1731-1800), the often-mad English poet. In “A Poetical Epistle To Lady Austen” (1781) he writes:
“Dear Anna, — Between
friend and friend,
Prose answers every common
end;
Serves, in a plain and
homely way,
To express the occurrence
of the day;
Our health, the weather,
and the news,
What walks we take, what
books we choose,
And all the floating
thoughts we find
Upon the surface of the
mind.”
That’s as charming and
civilized a description of letter writing between friends as I know. In The
Peace of the Augustans: A Survey of Eighteenth Century Literature as a Place of
Rest and Refreshment (1916), George Saintsbury is equally charming in his
description of Cowper’s gifts as a letter writer:
“If his range of subject is somewhat small-beerish it is the freshest and most refreshing, the most delicately tasted, and the most enlivening if not stimulating small beer that ever came from honest malt and hops and pure water. You cannot dislike anything in Cowper, and it must, again, be a very peculiar and unenviable person who despises anything in him.”
I keep trying to get around to reading "Selected Letters" by William Cowper, edited by William Hadley, and published in 1926 as Volume 774 in Everyman's Library. At the top of his two-page introduction, Hadley quotes Robert Southey: "William Cowper, the best of English letter-writers."
ReplyDeleteI'm going to have to float this volume to the top of my reading stack.
As for the Saintsbury volume, all one can say is: read it, and re-read it.