A reader from Spokane, Wash., whose existence I had never suspected before Wednesday, wrote to ask: “Is literature merely a hobbyhorse of yours?” Well, yes, despite the adverb. “Hobby” is wrong. “Vocation” is pretentiously wrong, and so is “avocation.” “Pastime”? Weak and meaningless. Golf is a pastime. I didn’t have a satisfactory answer and offered the feeble “It’s what I like to do.”
One of
Laurence Sterne’s hobby-horses in Tristram
Shandy is “hobbyhorse.” Walter Shandy obsesses on his vacuous theories
unattached to reality – a fine parody of intellectuals. Uncle Toby’s hobbyhorse
is military strategy and construction of his bowling-green battlefield. His
servant, Corporal Trim, revels in the sound of his own voice. Sterne treats
hobby-horses, rightly, as fodder for comedy. In real life, they are more
likely to be tiresome, especially hobby-horses of the political variety, a
plague upon the land. Sterne concludes
his seventh chapter like this:
“Nay, if you
come to that, Sir, have not the wisest of men in all ages, not excepting
Solomon himself,—have they not had their HOBBY-HORSES;—their running
horses,—their coins and their cockle-shells, their drums and their trumpets,
their fiddles, their pallets,—their maggots and their butterflies?—and so long
as a man rides his HOBBY-HORSE peaceably and quietly along the King’s highway,
and neither compels you or me to get up behind him,—pray, Sir, what have either
you or I to do with it?”
A hobbyhorse
lies somewhere between a harmless diversion and a symptom of OCD. Ladling on
more flattery, my reader adds, “You’re a kind of coelacanth”—a primitive fish
once thought to be extinct. He goes on: “America today is inhospitable to the
serious bookworm, don't you think?” No, I answered, “I think it’s indifferent.
Most people don’t give a shit, and there’s nothing wrong with that reaction or
lack of reaction. We can’t expect credit or admiration for doing what we like
to do.”
In the
summer 2017 issue of The Hopkins Review,
the poet and rare book dealer Ernest Hilbert reviewed Browsings: A Year of Reading, Collecting, and Living with Books by
Michael Dirda, the longtime book columnist for The Washington Post. I like Dirda and once interviewed him for a
newspaper story I was writing about the novelist William Kennedy. As often
happens when one dedicated reader meets another, we started swapping favorite
books and writers. This was thirty years ago but I remember our shared
enthusiasm for, among others, the Spanish writer Julian Rios. Hilbert writes: “If
the life of the mind required an advocate, Dirda would be on retainer. After
all, it is hard to argue with his well-worn conviction that ‘we don’t read for
high-minded reasons. We read for aesthetic, emotional, and intellectual
excitement.’”
That’s it: excitement,
or at least sustained, reliable pleasure. I don’t know how we acquire it. My
family was not bookish. I wasn’t discouraged to read. Rather, I was surrounded by
indifference. As a result, there was nothing guilty about the pleasure I
experienced. I know that if all else is equal (which it never is), I prefer the
company of well-read people to non-readers. We tend to understand each other and
share comparable senses of irony, humor and all-around values. We like ideas,
yes, but we usually like words and their artful arrangement even more.
Within this particular context the simplest construction "It's what I like to do" strikes me as perhaps the most profound of responses. Anything stronger would be superfluous as it would turn one's love of literature into a pitiful cry of defense. Art gives pleasure. Why it does so forces us to go deeper into ourselves. It is why this blog has lasted for as long as it has.
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