“Shakespeare a crumbling clot of wisdom left / In old men’s cranies of all else bereft.”
It feels
that way sometimes. Every fat man with ready patter? Falstaff. Every snotty grad
student? Hamlet. A naively idealistic young woman? Miranda. We watched a crime movie
last week in which the camera lingered on a woman studying her bloody hands. Of
course: Lady Macbeth. After a recent series of academic talks I was obligated
to endure, what came to mind? “Nothing will come of nothing: speak again.”
The poem quoted
is Walter de la Mare’s “Books,” published in the July 1906 issue of The Bookman. What are cranies? A poeticizing of “crania” – heads,
brains. At a certain age you start to understand and even prize the importance of
what remains after decades in your skull. Pope distilled the risk: “The bookful
blockhead, ignorantly read, / With loads of learned lumber in his head.” But
the world is a more entertaining place with a headful of poetry and prose. De la
Mare again:
“Heroes,
saints, martyrs—O, what dust would lie
On their
lean bones sole-shrined in memory!
Nay, this
bright Universe, dust, seas, and suns,
Books gone,
the terror were of brute and dunce . . .”
De la Mare (1873-1956)
was among the first poets I read as a kid. Much of his verse is Janus-headed.
You can’t tell if it faces backward or forward, is written for children or grownups, kids or so-called
sophisticates, and it doesn’t really matter. I sense de la Mare has not been cancelled but ignored into oblivion. One can think of few poets less attuned to
our time and taste, which means we probably ought to pay attention to him. Do yourself
a favor and read his novel Memoirs of a
Midget (1921). Randall Jarrell has the last word on him:
“De la Mare
is a hopeless romantic? Yes; but whose Law is it that a hopeless romantic
cannot write good poetry? Reading de la Mare, one often has a sense of delicate
and individual boredom, and wishes him a better writer than he is; but the man
who would wish him a different writer
would wish the Great Snowy Owl at the zoo a goose, so as to eat it for
Christmas.”
In the March
22, 1919, issue of The Living Age, de
la Mare published an essay, “Books and Reading.” He begins, as he often does,
with a childhood memory – reading Gulliver’s
Travels (in a “bowdlerized edition,” as many of them still are), for the
first time, on Christmas morning. He calls it his “first rememberable book,” as
it may have been mine. De la Mare isn’t milking nostalgia. He poses a serious
question:
“It was,
indeed, a crucial moment. What manner of man, he fondly speculates, would he
have been to-day if he had remained, as he was born, illiterate?”
2 comments:
De la Mare was a wonderful short story writer - "Seaton's Aunt" is the most chilling portrait of evil I've ever read, and one of the great - dare I say it? - ghost stories.
Yes, that headful of poetry has been for me that central cedar pole Frost writes of in The Silken Tent, its pinnacle to heavenward and signifying the sureness of the soul. This is not a position, but a condition.
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