“To tend the world: read a little, listen to a little music.”
I was slow
to warm to the late Adam Zagajewski. I still prefer his essays to his poems,
which often seem sentimental and formless, as though he demanded too little of
himself when writing poetry. Only in the five volumes of his prose so far
translated into English does Zagajewski seem like a true son of his literary
father, Zbigniew Herbert. In Another
Beauty (trans. Clare Cavanagh, 2000), he recalls Herbert’s stance as an independent
writerly conscience and proposes a new (or ancient but resuscitated) species he
calls the “historian-poet.” Consider his rather optimistic literary prognosis:
“We are in
fact witnessing a revival of literature that serves this very purpose, but
almost no one’s paid attention: writers’ journals, memoirs, poets’
autobiographies harken back to an archaic literary tradition, the writing of
history from the viewpoint of a sovereign individual and not an assistant
professor, a slave to modish methodologies, a state employee who must flatter
simultaneously both the powers that be and the reigning Parisian epistemology.”
His words are stirring and hopeless. How often do we encounter so unfettered a literary mind among contemporary writers of any sort? Our digitalized world ought to have made Zagajewski’s proposals readily attainable. Every man his Gutenberg. Instead, the herd-mind has metastasized. Politics, navel-gazing and aliteracy have scuttled the hope. Zagajewski, with obvious reservations, is the legitimate heir of Orwell at his rare best. Zagajewski makes his own suggestions, some unexpected, mostly from an earlier era:
“. . . the
autobiographies of Edwin Muir, Czesław Miłosz, Joseph Brodsky, among other
poets, the essays of Hubert Butler, Nicola Chiaromonte, the notebooks of Jozef
Czapski, Albert Camus . . . The sketches of Zbigniew Herbert, Jerzy Stempowski,
of Boleslaw Micinski, ill with tuberculosis. Here are people who refused to
cheat, who eagerly sought out the truth and shrank from neither poetry nor
terror, the two poles of our globe – since poetry does exist in the world, in
certain events, at rare moments. And there’s also no shortage of terror.”
His mention of Butler, the great Irish essayist, is gratifying. Add Theodore
Dalrymple and the late Simon Leys, principled writers who never turn politics
into a religion. The sentence quoted at the top, from Another Beauty, is no formula for happiness. Rather, it recalls
the self-care of a civilized mind, something like Montaigne’s retirement to his
tower. Zagajewski is not calling for quietism, a self-centered withdrawal from
the world. He writes, a few pages later:
“I didn't witness the extermination of the Jews, I was born too late. I bore witness, though to the gradual process by which Europe recovered its memory. This memory moved slowly, more like a lazy lowland river than a mountain stream, but it finally, unambiguously condemned the evil of the Holocaust and the Nazis, and the evil of Soviet civilization as well (though in this it was less successful, as if reluctant to admit that two such monstrosities might simultaneously coexist).”
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