I was reading an interview with X.J. Kennedy when this remark touched me unexpectedly: “He was, of all the people I ever met, the one who had the most intense enthusiasm for good literature.” Spoken by another, this might amount to glibly rendered bullshit, the sort of thing junior faculty say about their seniors on the tenure committee. Kennedy is referring to Randall Jarrell, whom he knew when both taught at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. I can apply Kennedy’s tribute to three people I’ve known, and only two were academics.
Jarrell’s
poetry means little to me but his sole novel, Pictures from an Institution: A Comedy (1954), and a handful of his
celebratory reviews, especially those devoted to Kipling, Christina Stead, Marianne
Moore, Walter de la Mare and A.E. Housman, constitute a piece of my critical
infrastructure. Jarrell likewise understood that mockery is the most potent negative criticism. Laughter hurts more than rational argument, and no critic is
funnier. Consider his dismissal of the nearly unreadable Stephen Spender:
“It isn’t
Mr. Spender but a small, simple -- determinedly simple -- part of Mr. Spender
that writes the poems; the poet is a lot smarter man than his style allows him
to seem. (If he were as soft and sincere and sentimental as most of his poems
make him out to be, the rabbits would have eaten him for lettuce, long ago.)”
Back to
Kennedy’s characterization of Jarrell. On July 24, 1965, less than three months
before his death, Jarrell published “Speaking of Books,” ostensibly a list of
suggestions for summer reading in The New
York Times Book Review. In fact, it’s a distillation of a lifetime
engagement with books. Read with the knowledge of Jarrell’s imminent death,
it’s a poignant human document but we shouldn’t allow poignancy to diminish its
worth as a paean to passionate reading:
“May I
finish by recommending . . . some books for summer reading?
Giradoux's Electra; Bemelman’s Hotel Splendide; Kim; Saint-Simon’s
Memoirs; Elizabeth Bishop’s North and
South; the new edition of A.L. Kroeber's textbook of anthropology, and
Ralph Linton’s The Study of Man;
Turgenev’s A Sportsman’s Sketches;
Colette’s Julie de Carneilhan and The Last of Cheri; Pirandello’s Henry IV; Freud’s Collected Papers; Peter Taylor’s The Widows of Thornton; Isak Dinesen’s Out of Africa; Goethe’s aphorisms; Blake’s ‘The Marriage of Heaven
and Hell’; Gerard Manley Hopkins’ Letters to Robert Bridges; Rilke’s The Notebooks of Malte Laurid Brigge,
and Chekhov’s plays, stories, letters -- anything.”
I can hear
the serious readers out there assessing Jarrell’s list: “Read that. Hated
that. Didn’t read that. Want to read that. Would never read that.” I’ve read
roughly half the titles. I can take Jarrell’s list seriously because I know how
seriously he read good books, not what’s fashionable or carries the imprimatur
of a bien pensant critic. The only
bookish things that leave me more indifferent than “best-of” lists are the
winners of literary awards. But I enjoy reading lists like Jarrell’s.
I want to know a serious reader’s favorite books, the ones he would suggest to other serious readers, the ones he rereads himself. I like the variety of
his choices. How many poet’s today, assembling a comparable list, would
recommend so few poets? I love Saint Simon, Colette and Taylor. Kim. And
Chekhov, of course – “anything.”
I might add Parade’s End, Ronald Knox’s Enthusiasm, Zeno’s Conscience, Memoirs of a Midget, Arabia Deserta, Imaginary Conversations, Memoirs of Hadrian, London Labour and the London Poor, Barbarian in the Garden, The American Scene, Pale Fire, The Lives of the Eminent Poets, The Leopard, Isaac Babel’s stories, Daniel Deronda, “Master and Man,” Between Meals, Life and Fate. Tristram Shandy, Nadezhda Mandelstam’s memoirs, J.V. Cunningham’s and William Hazlitt’s Essays . . .
A treasure trove indeed. Thank you for sharing. You've given us much to consider.
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to reading Joseph Epstein's newly published memoir, although I think he claimed at one time that he wouldn't write one. Your list reminded me that I need to have a go at 'Daniel Deronda'. I've read 'Middlemarch' twice, but that's it for George Eliot.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tipoff to Speaking of Books. This is priceless: And recommending Kant's "The Critique of Judgment," reader, is its own reward. A fresh, candid tone is best. Strauss told conductors to play "Elektra" "as if it were 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' -- like fairy music"; that is how I recommend "The Critique of Judgment."
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