In “The Madonna of the Future,” an 1873 story by Henry James, an American painter in Florence tells the narrator, “If you but knew the rapture of observation! I gather with every glance some hint for light, for color or relief! When I get home, I pour out my treasures into the lap of my Madonna. O, I’m not idle!”
Neither was
James, who remained throughout his career a tirelessly Balzacian writer in
every form but poetry. When his painter rhapsodizes over “the rapture of
observation!” he speaks for his creator. Never had a writer so scrupulously recorded
his observations of the material and social worlds, and of consciousness itself.
In The American Scene (1906), James characterizes
himself as “the lone observer” and “the restless analyst,” who “vibrate[s] with
more curiosity” than a mere tourist.
The most
Jamesian of subsequent writers, who learned the most from the Master,
internalized it and shared the results with readers, is not a novelist but a
poet, Marianne Moore. Some of her poems, with line breaks removed, might pass for James’ prose. In her essay of 1934, “Henry James As a
Characteristic American,” Moore quotes the phrase cited above: “There was in
him ‘the rapture of observation,’ but more unequivocally even than that,
affection for family and country.” She goes on:
“Things for
Henry James glow, flush, glimmer, vibrate, shine, hum, bristle, reverberate.
Joy, bliss, ecstasies, intoxication, a sense of trembling in every limb, a
shattering first glimpse,” and so on for another sixty-nine words in that same sentence, about a third of them James’. Moore is one of literature’s inveterate
allusionists, rivalling Montaigne and Burton. In her poems and prose, references to
James abound. In an early bit of light verse titled “To a Cantankerous Poet
Ignoring his Compeers—Thomas Hardy, Bernard Shaw, Joseph Conrad, Henry James,”
she refers to “James’s odysseys / of intricate outlook.” In “Picking and Choosing,” which begins “Literature is a phase of life,” she takes on James and
Hardy again, but Edmund Burke gets the best lines: “And / Burke is a / psychologist—of
acute, raccoon- / like curiosity.” Which is also true of James.
But beyond
allusions, Moore possesses a James-like appetite for the world. She celebrates
it in a manner never fatuously rah-rah. In 1966, in a letter to Writer’s Digest, she quotes John Cheever with approval: “I have an impulse to bring glad tidings. My sense of literature
is one of giving, not diminishing.” Take these lines from “The Mind Is an Enchanting Thing”: “the mind / feeling its
way as though blind, / walks along with its eyes on the ground. / It has
memory’s ear / that can hear without / having to hear.” Consider the foreword
Moore wrote for Predilections, her
first prose collection, published in 1955. Here it is in its entirety:
“Silence is
more eloquent than speech – a truism; but sometimes something that someone has
written excites one’s admiration and one is tempted to write about it; if it is
in a language other than one’s own, perhaps to translate it – or try to; one
feels that what holds one’s attention might hold the attention of others. That
is to say, there is a language of sensibility of which words can be the
portrait – a magnetism, an ardor, a refusal to be false, to which the following
pages attempt to testify.”
Sounds like
Henry James in one of his more rhapsodic moments. Moore was born on this date, November
15, in 1887 and died in 1972 at age eighty-four.
[The James
essay and other prose cited here is collected in The Complete Prose of Marianne Moore (ed. Patricia C. Willis,
Viking, 1986).]
No comments:
Post a Comment