In 1985, the year Mikhail Gorbachev was elected General Secretary by the Politburo, the scholar and translator Clarence Brown published The Portable Twentieth-Century Russian Reader, a selection ranging from Tolstoy and Chekhov to Voinovich and Sokolov. In the introduction he says provocatively and correctly:
“I now look
back on this banquet of words with much pleasure, which I hope nothing will
prevent your sharing. These writers, after all, continue in our time the
tradition that has made Russian, along with English and classical Greek, one of
the three supreme literatures of the world.”
Even the
most sophisticated among us long for a Golden Age of prosperity and artistic accomplishment,
a longing especially acute in a third-rate era like our own. For the credulous,
that would be the future. For the rest of us it’s often some past period we
have romanticized. The impulse is sentimental but understandable. When we remember
Nabokov, Swift and Homer, representing Brown’s three “supreme literatures,” we’re
reminded that genius, though scarce, is not a pipe dream.
Last week Di
Nguyen of The Little White Attic blog, in a post titled "My Favorite Centuries," identifies hers as the nineteenth and seventeenth. On Tuesday she asked me to
write about mine. Call me a spoilsport but I think immediately of the essential
things we didn’t have in the past, beginning with antibiotics. On New Year’s
Day 1842, while stropping his razor, Henry Thoreau’s brother John nicked the
tip of his left-hand ring finger. Within a week it had become “mortified,”
probably meaning the tissue had turned black and necrotic. On Jan. 9, his jaw
stiffened and by that evening he experienced the convulsions associated with
lockjaw. A Boston doctor examined John and concluded he could do nothing for
him. No one could have until the vaccine for tetanus was discovered in 1890.
John Thoreau, age twenty-seven, died on Jan. 11 in the arms of his helpless
brother.
Louis Pasteur,
one of the great heroes of humanity, didn’t begin formulating his germ theory
of disease until the decade after Thoreau’s death, and doctors and laypeople remained
skeptical of it for years. Joseph Lister would soon pioneer antiseptic surgery
but millions would go on dying from small pox, typhus, tuberculosis, cholera, diphtheria
and malaria – all treatable and often preventable today. Potable water was at a
premium, and water and sewage treatment frequently nonexistent.
Putting all
of that aside, what is my favorite century despite the obvious dangers?
Probably the eighteenth century in England, strictly on the basis of the
literature produced. Consider some of the bookish roll call: Swift, Pope,
Defoe, Johnson, Boswell, Fielding, Sterne, Smollett, Gibbon and Cowper, among
others. I would love to have read issues of The
Rambler as it was published and Tristram
Shandy and The Decline and Fall of
the Roman Empire as the volumes appeared.
Even the twentieth
century, the most barbarous in history, has its literary attractions. Consider late
Henry James, Conrad, Proust, Yeats, Valéry, Borges, Babel, Cavafy, Pessoa,
Elizabeth Bowen, the Mandelstams, Evelyn Waugh, Zbigniew Herbert, Henry Green and Eugenio Montale. Edgar
Bowers, instead of centuries or eras, celebrates individuals, three from three
different centuries, whose birthday he observes annually. This is from his title poem in For Louis Pasteur
(1990):
“I like to
think of Pasteur in Elysium
Beneath the
sunny pine of ripe Provence
Tenderly raising
black sheep, butterflies,
Silkworms,
and a new culture, for delight,
Teaching his
daughter to use a microscope
And musing
through a wonder—sacred passion,
Practice and
metaphysic all the same.
And, each
year, honor three births: Valéry,
Humbling his
pride by trying to write well,
Mozart, who
lives still, keeping my attention
Repeatedly
outside the reach of pride,
And him
whose mark I witness as a trust.
Others he
saves but could not save himself—
Socrates,
Galen, Hippocrates—the spirit
Fastened by love upon the human cross.”
I have read a lot of books about the history of medicine, and am currently reading the excellent book, The Great War and the Birth of Modern Medicine: A History, by Thomas Helling (Pegasus Books, 2022).
ReplyDeleteGiven the miraculous improvements to our lives due to modern medicine, it is incomprehensible to me that there is a vast minority of people who disbelieve, against all scientific evidence, in getting vaccinated against disease-causing microorganisms, including Covid-19.
Don't be a killjoy, Patrick.
ReplyDeleteI was just talking about favourite centuries in terms of the arts. I never would have chosen to live in the early 20th century, let alone 19th or 17th.