Like most humans I flatter myself that I’m in control of every thought and action. I’m the boss. Increasingly, age teaches otherwise. What goes on in consciousness is more like a third-rate vaudeville show than an earnestly delivered TED talk. I seldom know what’s coming next, juggler or baggy-pants comedian. Emotionally, I’m a fairly disciplined guy who resists self-indulgence, until I’m reminded otherwise:
“There is
laughter that goes so far as to lose all touch with its motive, and to exist
only, grossly, in itself. This is laughter at its best. A man to whom such
laughter has often been granted may happen to die in a workhouse. No matter. I
will not admit that he has failed in life. Another, who has never laughed thus,
may be buried in Westminster Abbey, leaving more than a million pounds
overhead. What then? I regard him as a failure.”
How nice to
be judged a success. The other night my youngest son showed me a Richard Prior
clip and I laughed till I cried. Same reaction when not long ago I watched The Bank Dick for the twenty-seventh
time and reread Charles Portis’ Masters
of Atlantis. There’s a species of laughter akin to blissful inebriation and
certain advanced spiritual states. The self is briefly forgotten. In fact, it
disappears. Such moments are dependent to some degree on unexpectedness. Comedy
is rooted in surprise. Preachiness kills it.
Max Beerbohm
is author of the passage cited above, from his essay “Laughter” (And Even Yet, 1920). Ours is a world in which
stridency and volume are mistaken for honesty. Beerbohm’s voice is hushed. Irony
lies coiled, ready to spring from his soft-spoken manner. He is among those who,
Joseph Epstein suggests in his appropriately titled Charm: The Elusive Enchantment (2018), “find life delightful and through
their own charm bring delight to others!”
In “Diminuendo”
(The Works of Max Beerbohm, 1896),
Beerbohm writes:
“Yes! among
books that charm, and give wings to the mind, will my days be spent. I shall be
ever absorbing the things great men have written; with such experience I will charge
my mind to the full.”
Beerbohm
died on this date, May 20, in 1956, at age eighty-three.
No comments:
Post a Comment