“A knowledge of men and of books is also to be desired; for it is a writer’s best reason of being, and without it he does well to hold his tongue. Blessed with these attributes he is an essayist to some purpose. Give him leisure and occasion, and his discourse may well become as popular as Montaigne’s own.”
If pressed to name my favorite literary
form I would choose the essay, the form without a strict form, seemingly designed
for free spirits with brains and emotional depth – “a knowledge of men and of
books,” as W.E. Henley puts it above. The most unlikely things can be
successful essays – reviews, memoirs, scientific papers, recipes, fiction. The
best ones have a point, even an argument or lesson, but never hector or harangue
the reader. An essayist confides. Without condescending, he puts his arm around
your shoulder and talks softly, turning you into the sole member of his audience, a person
worthy of his trust.
Sure, Montaigne started it all (except for
Plutarch and Seneca), but the English came to perfect it – Johnson, Hazlitt,
Lamb, Stevenson, Chesterton, Beerbohm and the rest. William Ernest Henley
(1849-1903) will never be a member of that front rank. He was a poet, lauded in
his day, and will always be remembered for a poem my eighth-grade English
teacher had us memorize sixty years ago: "Invictus." It’s a natural for recitation,
up there with Kipling.
The passage at the top is taken from Henley’s
“Essays and Essayists” collected in Views and Reviews: Essays in Appreciation (1892).He writes:
“Essayists, like poets, are born and not
made, and for one worth remembering the world is confronted with a hundred not
worth reading. Your true essayist is in a literary sense the friend of
everybody. As one of the brotherhood has phrased it, it is his function ‘to
speak with ease and opportunity to all men.’ He must be personal, or his
hearers can feel no manner of interest in him. He must be candid and sincere,
or his readers presently see through him. He must have learned to think for
himself and to consider his surroundings with an eye that is both kindly and
observant, or they straightway find his company unprofitable.”
Henley was born on this date, August 23, in
1849. His friend Stevenson, who based the character of Long John Silver in Treasure
Island (1883) on the one-legged Henley, wrote him a letter from Nebraska on
August 23, 1879 -- the poet's thirtieth birthday. Stevenson writes a brief, impromptu essay from Willa Cather's (b. 1873) future turf:
“I am sitting on the top of the cars with a mill party from Missouri going west for his health. Desolate flat prairie upon all hands. Here and there a herd of cattle, a yellow butterfly or two; a patch of wild sunflowers; a wooden house or two; then a wooden church alone in miles of waste; then a windmill to pump water. When we stop, which we do often, for emigrants and freight travel together, the kine first, the men after, the whole plain is heard singing with cicadae.”
No comments:
Post a Comment