One of the stranger events recounted by Montaigne:
“[I]f I must
bring myself into this, a brother of mine, [Arnaud, Lord of] Saint-Martin,
twenty-three years old, who had already given pretty good proof of his valor, while
playing tennis was struck by a ball a little above the right ear, with no sign
of contusion or wound. He did not sit down or rest, but five or six hours later
he died of an apoplexy that this blow gave him. With such frequent and ordinary
examples passing before our eyes, how can we possibly rid ourselves of the
thought of death and of the idea that at every moment it is gripping us by the
throat?”
I’ve never
played tennis, that deadly game, for which I’m grateful. Montaigne is writing
in an early essay, “That to Philosophize Is to Learn to Die.” His theme is the
capriciousness of death, its unpredictability coupled with inevitability. “How
many ways,” he writes, “has death to surprise us!” Never assume Montaigne or
any of our forebears is without a sense of humor. “Haven’t you
seen one of our kings killed at play?” he asks. “And did not one of his
ancestors die from the charge of a hog?”
Thursday was
the two-month anniversary of my brother’s death. The cause was more
conventional than a tennis ball or rampaging hog: cancer, likely self-induced.
Ken started smoking cigarettes at twelve and lived to age sixty-nine. I think of him daily, often as part of a memory of some stunt we pulled as kids, like the
time we set up a nine-hole golf course in the house, using drinking glasses as
holes and breaking three of them. We knew as little about golf as we did about
tennis.
David Kubal was a friend of Henri Coulette’s in the English department at Cal State. Kubal
published a study of Orwell in 1972 and died at age forty-five a decade later.
Coulette (1927-88) dedicated “Night Thoughts” to his friend. Here are the
opening lines of the fourth stanza:
“Now you are
elsewhere, elsewhere comes to this,
The
thoughtless body, like a windblown rose,
Is gathered
up and ushered toward repose."
Coulette’s
two brothers, both his junior, had preceded him in death. He addresses Kubal as
“brother,” a precious honorific:
"The priest
wore purple; now the night does, too.
A dog barks,
and another, and another.
There are a
hundred words for the word brother.
We use them
when we love, when we are sick,
And in our
dreams when we are somehow you.
What are we
if not wholly catholic?”
[The
Montaigne passage is from The Complete
Essays of Montaigne (trans. Donald Frame, Stanford University Press, 1957).
“Night Thoughts” can be found in The
Collected Poems of Henri Coulette (eds. Donald Justice and Robert Mezey,
University of Arkansas Press, 1990).]
A brother is a wonderful thing, and you never laugh as truly or heartily with anyone as you do with a brother or sister.
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