“I believe that it behooves the living, for our own sake, to keep the memory of the dead alive and vivid . . .”
That’s William Maxwell in
1980 when he received the William Dean Howells Medal from the American Academy
of Arts and Letters, given every five years for the most distinguished novel
published during that period. For once, they got it right. Maxwell was honored
for So Long, See You Tomorrow, his finest novel, published when he was
seventy-eight. Here is the remainder of his sentence, so typical of Maxwell’s
graciousness:
“. . . and so I would
remind you now of Louise Bogan, or her ravishing formal poetry and her literary
criticism, so free from intellectual display and so on target. Because of her
encouragement at a critical period of my life I stopped being a full-time
editor and went back to writing novels and I therefore have her to thank for
the fact that I am standing where I am this minute.”
Bogan had died a decade
earlier, on February 4, 1970, at age seventy-two. Maxwell’s obituary for her
appeared in the February 7 issue of The New Yorker. He wrote of his
friend:
“To say that she was one
of the finest lyric poets of our time is hardly to do her justice; her best
poems have an emotional depth and force and a perfection of form that owe very
little to the age she lived in and are not likely to go out of style, being a
matter of nobody’s style but her own. She was a handsome, direct, impressive,
vulnerable woman. In whatever she wrote, the line of truth was exactly
superimposed on the line of feeling.”
We’ve all heard funeral
eulogies delivered by strangers to the deceased, collages of cliché, just as we’ve
heard award-show acceptance speeches that amount to Olympic-class displays of ass-kissing.
The most important thing in the Howells speech is a homely four-word phrase: “for
our own sake.” We are diminished as men and women if we forget our dead.
Back in the seventies, at
the first newspaper where I worked as a reporter, the first thing I wrote was
an obituary for a farmer whose last name was Campbell. That’s all I remember
but I’ve taken it as a sign. I was given my theme: “to keep the memory of the
dead alive and vivid . . .” That goes for our personal dead and the writers
whose memory we keep alive by reading their books.