Joseph Epstein once wrote that he relies on three writers to “lift one out of gloom, and away from the valley of small and large woes” – Montaigne, Justice Holmes (in his letters) and H.L. Mencken. I’ve tested his proposition and it works. What an odd trio, separated by three centuries. The Frenchman dispels gloom with his fortitude (kidney stones!) and his counterintuitive gift for being self-absorbed while not being egotistical. Holmes was able to draw humor and literary insights even out of that Leftist twit Harold Laski. And Mencken was a force of nature, crafting some of the finest American prose.
But just when I’m falling
for Mencken again he'll say something foolish, embarrassing or repellent. I read him for the
same reason my sons consume energy drinks – that boost, that reminder that life
is an unearned treat to be savored. And yet at one point, while praising the
Hebrew Bible, Mencken will describe Jews as “the most unpleasant race ever heard
of.” That’s blind, brain-damaged stupidity, unworthy of Mencken at his best. Though with him, of course, fairness is seldom the point. Harsh, cleansing humor is. I laugh when he
describes Mississippi as part of the “Hookworm Belt” and North Carolina as situated
in the “Malaria Belt.” The latter I tested on a native North Carolinian among
our neighbors, and he hooted approvingly. One brandishes this as evidence that
perhaps ours is not the most earnestly humorless of ages. William Hazlitt got
it right in his introduction to Lectures on the English Comic Writers
(1819):
“You cannot force people to laugh: you cannot give a reason why they should laugh: they must laugh of themselves, or not at all. As we laugh from a spontaneous impulse, we laugh the more at any restraint upon this impulse. We laugh at a thing merely because we ought not.”
Mencken’s on my mind again
because I’m rereading the late Terry Teachout’s The Skeptic: A Life of H.L.
Mencken (HarperCollins, 2002). Terry echoes my ambivalent reactions to
Mencken’s prolific body of work, so much of which is wonderful – in particular
the three volumes of memoir and The American Language. Terry praises the
latter’s “quirkiness”:
“Rarely has a scholar,
amateur or otherwise, succeeded in writing a book so revealing of his own
habits of mind—and so blessedly free of pedantry—without compromising his
essential seriousness.”
Terry puts Mencken in
perspective by holding him up against Dr. Johnson, a writer he esteemed perhaps above
all others. He concedes “a fundamental inadequacy in Mencken’s thought: a
skepticism so extreme as to issue in philosophical incoherence.” Terry
juxtaposes the two men:
“Like Johnson, Mencken was
resolutely unsentimental, ebulliently grim, full of the sanity that comes from
an unswerving commitment to common sense. But for Johnson ‘the mind can only
repose on the stability of truth,’ while Mencken found nothing to be ‘wholly
good, wholly desirable, wholly true.’ This unequivocal rejection of the
possibility of ultimate truth, a position irreconcilable with his scientific
rationalism, left him with nothing but a concept of ‘honor’ as shallow as the
Victorian idea of progress in which he believed so firmly (and so
paradoxically).”
People seem increasingly uncomfortable
with our essentially contradictory nature. That’s no reason to deny yourself
the pleasures of Mencken’s company and reject his enduring ability to “lift one
out of gloom.”
1 comment:
Mencken is wonderful, but I find I have to take him in small doses. Perhaps if he'd been better-educated or more widely traveled (he barely ever left Baltimore), he might have had a better outlook - or perhaps such education or travel might just have confirmed him in his prejudices.
One thing, though: I'm sure he would be outraged at Baltimore's decline in the 66 years since his death.
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