Like porkchops, fame is highly perishable. Writers once read by millions – think of James Michener and, at a far more accomplished level, James Gould Cozzens – have evaporated from literary memory. Newspaper writing and journalism in general are especially biodegradable. Who wants yesterday’s papers, let alone those published a century ago?
Franklin Pierce Adams, known to the public as F.P.A., was once a durably familiar name in
American popular culture and a prolific writer of light verse. From 1913 to
1937 his column, “The Conning Tower,” was published in the Herald Tribune and other New York newspapers. With Dorothy Parker
and George S. Kaufman, he was a charter member of the Algonquin Round Table,
and he joined the panel of experts on the popular radio show “Information,
Please” in 1938. Readers and non-readers alike could quote “F.P.A.isms,” the
way they quoted Ogden Nash. Perhaps Adams’ most famous line: “To err is human;
to forgive, infrequent.” His was an era when wit, not stridency, was prized by
a broad potion of the American reading public.
Among many
other volumes, Isaac Waisberg at IWP Books has digitalized eight of F.P.A.’s poetry collections published between 1911 and 1936. Much of Adams’ light verse
is, admittedly, doggerel, just not very good, but he hated free verse and
remained loyal to meter and rhyme. That alone makes much of his poetry more readable than most
of the sludge published today, though some of the topicality will lose readers. “Why
Don’t You Do Something Big?” is the prefatory poem to Weights & Measures (1917) and stands as Adams' poetic apologia:
“The Comic
Bard is supposed to sigh
For the
skill and the power to make you cry:
He’s
supposed to yearn, when he has the time,
To make you
sob as you read his rhyme.
That thought
in many a bard may be;
I only know
how the thing strikes me.
For mine aim
is low, mine ambish [ambition] atom:
I’m tickled
to death when they call me comic.”
Adams loved words, which ought to be an obvious thing to say about any poet. Often the
strategy energizing his light verse is to undercut grandiosity while not indulging
in it. Here is “To a Thesaurus” (The Melancholy
Lute: Selected Songs of Thirty Years, 1936):
“O precious
codex, volume, tome,
Book,
writing, compilation, work
Attend the
while I pen a pome,
A
jest, a jape, a quip, a quirk.
“For I would
pen, engross, indite,
Transcribe,
set forth, compose, address,
Record,
submit – yea, even write
An
ode, an elegy to bless –
To bless,
set store by, celebrate,
Approve,
esteem, endow with soul,
Commend,
acclaim, appreciate,
Immortalize,
laud, praise, extol.
“Thy merit,
goodness, value, worth,
Expedience,
utility –
O manna,
honey, salt of earth,
I
sing, I chant, I worship thee!
“How could I
manage, live, exist,
Obtain,
produce, be real, prevail,
Be present
in the flesh, subsist,
Have
place, become, breathe or inhale.
“Without thy
help, recruit, support,
Opitulation,
furtherance,
Assistance,
rescue, aid, resort,
Favour,
sustention and advance?
“Ala Alack!
and well-a-day!
My
case would then be dour and sad,
Likewise
distressing, dismal, gray,
Pathetic,
mournful, dreary, bad.
“Though I
could keep this up all day,
This
lyric, elegiac, song,
Meseems hath
come the time to say
Farewell!
Adieu! Good-by! So long!”
Opitulation is a new one on me (and my spell-check software):
from the Latin, “help, aid, assistance.” From the same Adams volume comes “Broadmindedness,”
which has a newfound applicability in the twenty-first century:
“How narrow
his vision, how cribbed and confined!
How
prejudiced all of his views!
How hard is
the shell of his bigoted mind!
How
difficult he to excuse!
“His face
should be slapped and his head should be banged;
A
person like that ought to die!
I want to be
fair, but a man should be hanged
Who’s
any less liberal than I.”
Adams died
on this date, March 23, in 1960 at age seventy-eight.
I appreciated your comments on the perishability of fame. They reminded me of what the late Terry Teachout wrote on that subject. Using Johnny Carson as his example (being one of the most famous people in the US for 30 years as host of "The Tonight Show"), Terry noted that Carson had been retired for just over 12 years at the time of his death in January, 2005, at 79. 12 years - long enough to possibly have wondered "what it was like to have once been famous."
ReplyDeleteA good thing to tell famous people (like Taylor Swift, who, at 34, has a career that's white hot right now) is to enjoy the fame, but don't take it seriously.