April is the kindest and cruelest month.
Think of the
births: George Herbert (April 3, 1593), Shakespeare (April 23, 1564), Henry
Vaughan (April 17, 1621), Daniel Defoe (April 24, 1731), Edward Gibbon (April
27, 1737), William Hazlitt (April 10, 1778), Anthony Trollope (April 24, 1815),
Charles Baudelaire (April 9, 1821), Henry James (April 15, 1843), Constantine
Cavafy (April 17, 1863), Walter de la Mare (April 25, 1873), Vladimir Nabokov
(April 22, 1899), Samuel Beckett (April 13, 1906), C.H. Sisson, (April 22,
1914), Bernard Malamud (April 26, 1914).
And then the
deaths: Shakespeare (April 23, 1616), Miguel de Cervantes (April 23, 1616), Henry
Vaughan (April 23, 1695), William Cowper (April 25, 1800), William Wordsworth (April
23, 1850), Mark Twain (April 10, 1910), Edwin Arlington Robinson (April 6, 1935),
A.E. Housman (April 30, 1936), Willa Cather (April 24, 1947), Flann O’Brien
(April 1, 1966), Evelyn Waugh (April 10, 1966), Basil Bunting (April 17, 1985),
Ralph Ellison (April 16, 1994), Thom Gunn (April 25, 2004), Saul Bellow (April 5,
2005), Muriel Spark (April 13, 2006).
“Bright
books! the perspectives to our weak sights,
The clear
projections of discerning lights,
Burning and
shining thoughts, man’s posthume day . . .”
That’s Henry
Vaughan, who was born and died in April, in his poem “To His Books.” Vaughan
mentions no writers by name but suggests he has culled his library down to the
essential volumes: “But you were all choice flow’rs, all set and drest / By old sage florists, who well knew the best.” In another poem, “On Sir Thomas Bodley’s Library, the Author Being Then in Oxford,” he returns to
the familiar trope of authors remaining alive through their books:
“They are
not dead, but full of blood again;
I mean the
sense, and ev’ry line a vein.
Triumph not
o'er their dust; whoever looks
In here,
shall find their brains all in their books.”
My favorite
among Vaughan’s poems remains the first one I read more than half a century
ago. “The World” begins:
“I saw
Eternity the other night,
Like a great
ring of pure and endless light,
All calm, as it was bright;
And round
beneath it, Time in hours, days, years,
Driv’n by the spheres
Like a vast
shadow mov’d; in which the world
And all her train were hurl’d.”
I happened
on it by way of another book, Alfred Kazin’s A Walker in the City (1951). Mystics often lose us with their
inarticulate enthusiasm. Their experiences defy language so they resort to
yawping (Whitman), the linguistic equivalent of the early Shakers writhing on
the floor. In contrast, Vaughan might be describing a picnic in the park with
the folks. His tone is matter-of-fact, methodical, almost journalistic. He does
this with impressive regularity, especially in his opening lines, as in “They Are All Gone Into the World of Light!” and “I Walk’d the Other Day.” The effect
is of a gifted storyteller who hooks us with his first words. To be convincing,
wonder must be made to sound familiar.
Give thanks
for the kindness. National Poetry Month does little to ease the cruelty.
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