I’m reminded of my age only when someone holds a door open for me (That’s my job!) or performs some other courtesy. I was returning to my car from the university library, carrying a canvas tote bag of books, walking with the aid of my cane, as usual, when a young man asked if he could carry them for me. A complicated set of reactions: 1). That’s what a boy asks a girl. 2). Do I look like a cripple? 3). Thoughtfulness and good manners aren’t extinct after all.
The essential
image of ourselves we carry around with us doesn’t really age. We’re simultaneously
twelve, forty-three and whatever age we happen to be at the moment. I’ve known too
many who are preoccupied with getting older, an obsession now exploited by multiple industries. Dr. Johnson puts it like this in The
Rambler on September 8, 1750:
"To secure to the old that influence which
they are willing to claim, and which might so much contribute to the
improvement of the arts of life, it is absolutely necessary that they give
themselves up to the duties of declining years, and contentedly resign to youth
its levity, its pleasures, its frolics, and its fopperies. It is a hopeless
endeavour to unite the contrarieties of spring and winter; it is unjust to
claim the privileges of age and retain the playthings of childhood.”
Some regard
youthfulness as their most valuable possession, and it evaporates. The notion
of age as a sort of rapprochement with existence seems to be disappearing. Time
to learn the pleasures of memory. Here is Dick Davis’ poem “Leaving the Fair”:
“Imagine
that you’re at a raucous fair,
The kind you
went to sixty years ago—
The
beckoning booths, just pennies for a throw,
Loud
barkers, louder hawkers everywhere,
Such
promises of pleasure in the air . . .
A plunging
carousel, a puppet show,
A tent for movies,
Marilyn Monroe
Fixing the
tumult with her glaucous stare.
“And now you
walk away from all its noise,
The too
bright colors busy in your mind
But less so
since you’re leaving them behind
As if you
knew they’re someone else’s toys.
That’s what
old age is like . . . the whole shebang
An echo of a
song a stranger sang.”
Davis turned
seventy-nine last April. I turn seventy-two later this month.
[Davis’ poem
is included in Love in Another Language
(Carcanet, 2017).]
I hope you let him help you. It would have been an act of kindness in response to his.
ReplyDeleteGeorge T