“He was never seen to be transported with Mirth, or dejected with Sadness; always Chearful, but rarely Merry, at any sensible Rate, seldom heard to break a Jest; and when he did, he would be apt to blush at the Levity of it: His Gravity was Natural and without Affectation.”
The absence
of a sense of humor usually makes for unhappy company. Some of us associate wit
or a taste for comedy – which begins with the gift of not taking oneself or the
world too seriously -- with sanity. Hitler and D.H. Lawrence were humorless. So
is Noam Chomsky. These are people you would never welcome into your home, even
if you knew nothing else about them. After all, tedium can be contagious. The
passage above is from a brief, anonymously published life of Sir Thomas Browne.
The author fails to understand that funny people often remain poker-faced, even
diffident and tight-lipped. A would-be joker who laughs or even smiles too broadly at his own
wisecracks is an unlikely comedian. The biographer quoted above continues:
“They that
knew no more of him than by the Briskness of his Writings, found themselves
deceived in their Expectation, when they came in his Company, noting the
Gravity and Sobriety of his Aspect and Conservation; so free from Loquacity, or
much Talkativeness, that he was something difficult to be engaged in any
Discourse; though when he was so, it was always Singular, and never Trite or
Vulgar.”
Never have I thought of Browne’s prose as brisk but among that word’s older meanings are lively
and vivacious. Fast-paced came later. In Hydriotaphia, Urn Burial (1658), Browne seems to be defending himself against people like
his biographer: “Men that look upon my outside, perusing only my condition, and
fortunes, do err in my altitude; for I am above Atlas his shoulders.” I’m more
interested in Browne’s mirth. In his Dictionary, Dr.
Johnson defines the word straightforwardly as “merriment; jollity; gaiety;
laughter,” though in his “Life of Browne” he sees him as primarily sober-minded,
as did Sir Edmund Gosse. Hazlitt, Lamb and Coleridge thought otherwise.
I remember
in 1995 when The Paris Review
published an issue titled “Whither Mirth?” It’s a good question but false advertising.
The journal was wall-to-wall tiresome, as analyses of humor usually are. Shakespeare
apparently liked mirth. He used it
fifty-seven times in twenty-seven works (even in Macbeth), including seven times in Love’s Labour’s Lost. Speaking of Lord Dumaine in Act II, Scene 1 of that play, Rosaline says:
“His eye
begets occasion for his wit;
For every
object that the one doth catch
The other
turns to a mirth-moving jest,
Which his
fair tongue, conceit's expositor,
Delivers in
such apt and gracious words
That aged
ears play truant at his tales
And younger
hearings are quite ravished;
So sweet and
voluble is his discourse.”
That sounds
a lot like Browne, one of the great voluptuaries of prose in English. Tell me this
passage, from Part II, Section 9 of Religio Medici was written by a humorless man:
“I was never
yet once, and commend their resolutions who never marry twice, not that I
disallow of second marriage; as neither in all cases of Polygamy, which
considering some times and the unequall number of both sexes may bee also
necessary. The whole world was made for man, but the twelfth part of man for
woman: man is the whole world and the breath of God, woman the rib and crooked
piece of man. I could be content that we might procreate like trees, without
conjunction, or that there were any way to perpetuate the world without this
triviall and vulgar way of coition . . .”
Browne and
his wife had ten children, four of whom survived their parents. Browne died on
this date, October 19, in 1682 at age seventy-seven.
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