“Perfect weather. And to think that on such a day people are still dying!”
Sometimes I suspect the
human imagination is by nature Gothic, though histrionic may be a better
description. We like to dramatize things. Death is supposed to occur in the shadows, away from the
reassuring touch of sunlight. Thunder cracks, rain fills the streets, tall trees
fall.
The day my brother died in a Cleveland hospice was beautifully sunny, about 80 degrees, no rain, low humidity, a perfect day in August near the shore of Lake Erie. I had opened the curtains so the afternoon sunlight could fall on Ken. He had been unconscious for several days but he would have enjoyed it. I’ve just seen a characteristic photo of my brother – almost smiling, head cocked ironically, Old Testament-looking -- posted by our friend Gary Dumm.
The passage at the top is the
April 20, 1909 entry in Jules Renard’s Journal. His tone, like Ken’s, is
essentially comic but also a little cranky. Renard’s other entry that day: “My
faithfulness as a husband, a comical thing, which adds to my literary
reputation.”
Mostly for the sheer pleasure of
his prose I’m reading Sir Thomas Browne’s Urn Burial (1658) again:
“If the nearness of our
last necessity brought a nearer conformity into it, there were a happiness in
hoary hairs, and no calamity in half senses. But the long habit of living
indisposeth us for dying; when avarice makes us the sport of death, when even David
grew politickly cruel, and Solomon could hardly be said to be the wisest of
men. But many are too early old, and before the date of age.”
[The Renard passages are from Journal 1887-1910 (trans.
Theo Cuffe, selected and introduced by Julian Barnes, riverrun, 2020).]
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