“This morning I saw, for the first time in my life, a young boy, walking along the street, reading a book. And the beatific smile on his face, no one could believe.”
An extensive
library devoted to the perils and pleasures of reading while walking can be
found online. (Here, for instance.) It had never occurred to me that I might
need instruction in either activity. I regularly walked to my grade school,
about a mile from home, book in hand. I was already clumsy and no doubt tripped
on buckled sidewalks, but I don’t remember. I specifically recall walking to
school while reading a 1953 novel by Henry Felsen, Street Rod, the much-anticipated sequel to his Hot Rod (1950). I remember because the book report was due that day
and I hadn’t finished reading the book.
I’m speaking
now retrospectively. I can’t read in a moving automobile, though buses are
fine, nor can I read for any length of time or distance while walking. It would
be difficult to visually focus and I would fret about tripping into trees and
trucks. I rely on a cane, and concentration on a text would be risky. As it is,
my previously mentioned clumsiness has never left me, despite all those years
of ballet lessons. I feel affinity with Charles Lamb, as expressed in “Detached Thought on Books and Reading”:
“I am not
much a friend to out-of-doors reading. I cannot settle my spirits to it. I knew
a Unitarian minister, who was generally to be seen upon Snow-hill (as yet
Skinner's-street was not), between the hours of ten and eleven in the morning,
studying a volume of Lardner [Not Ring. This guy.]. I own this to have been a
strain of abstraction beyond my reach. I used to admire how he sidled along,
keeping clear of secular contacts. An illiterate encounter with a porter's
knot, or a bread basket, would have quickly put to flight all the theology I am
master of, and have left me worse than indifferent to the five points.”
We gave many
of our sons’ books from childhood to a boy who lives two doors away. He’s a
statistical anomaly – a dedicated reader – and I’ve often seen him walking down
our cul-de-sac reading myopically, with his face literally in a book. The smiling
boy described at the top was sighted by Louise Bogan in Dublin. In April and
May of 1937 she was visiting Ireland, her ancestral homeland, on what remained
of her 1933 Guggenheim Fellowship.
Bogan loved Ireland
without romanticizing it and often wrote about Joyce and Yeats. She reviewed Finnegans Wake for The New Yorker (“Joyce keeps unerringly to style’s economy, precision,
and weight”) and wrote at least six reviews and essays devoted to Yeats. In the
May 1938 issue of The Atlantic, eight
months before the poet’s death, Bogan wrote a long profile of Yeats and his
work:
“In age, he
shows no impoverishment of spirit or weakening of intention. He answers current
dogmatists with words edged with the same contempt for ‘the rigid world’ of
materialism that he used in youth. He is now content to throw out suggestions
that are not, perhaps, for our age to complete, as it is not for our age fully
to appreciate a man who reiterates: ‘If we have not the desire of artistic
perfection for an art, the deluge of incoherence, vulgarity, and triviality
will pass over our heads.’ But adherence to that creed, and that creed alone,
has given us the greatest poet writing in English to-day, and Ireland the
greatest it has ever known.”
[You can
find the poet’s April 14, 1937 letter to Morton Zabel, as well as the Joyce and
Yeats material, in A Poet’s Prose:
Selected Writings of Louise Bogan (ed. Mary Kinzie, Swallow Press/Ohio
University Press, 2005).]
As a kid in Catholic school, I used to see the priests walking up and down the driveway beside the church, reading their breviaries. This practice elevated the priesthood in my eyes.
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