“Except for a certain saving humor, I should indeed have been a full monster.”
One definition of a friend
is someone with whom you can share any joke or other comic effort without fear
of offending him. It may not be funny – the only pertinent criterion for
judging humorousness – but it’s not hateful (a word thrown around promiscuously
these days). Friends understand us. They don’t necessarily approve but neither
do they throw a tantrum, get uppity and admonish us.
The line at the top is by
the poet Louise Bogan, writing a letter on January 28, 1954, to another poet,
May Sarton. Bogan struggled with severe depression for more than forty years and
was hospitalized for it several times. Bogan is one of our finest American
poets, and that she was able to write so well under such conditions is heroic. The
book to read is Elizabeth Frank’s biography Louise Bogan: A Portrait
(1986).
What most interests me about
Bogan’s sentence is “a certain saving humor.” Never known as a humorist, Bogan
was highly intelligent, thoughtful and witty. With close friends she could be
herself. Bogan seems to be confirming a theory I’ve pondered for most of my
life – that a well-exercised sense of humor is often symptomatic of mental health,
if not always sanity.
I’ve been reading X.J.
Kennedy again, including “More Foolish Things Remind Me of You,” published in
the July/August 2006 “Humor Issue” of Poetry. It’s a laugh-out-loud poem
(This is a test!), especially these lines: “Lines sliced to little bits by deconstruction,
/ Loose gobs of fat removed by liposuction.”
You may have noticed the
subtitle: “With apologies to Eric Maschwitz.” He was the lyricist for
the 1935 standard “These Foolish Things” under the pseudonym “Holt Marvell.” I
suggest listening to at least one of these recordings of the song before
reading Kenney’s parody, so you get the melody in your head: Nat “King” Cole,
Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra.
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“These are a few of my favorite things…”
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