Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Higher Gossip: Essays and Criticism

    Page 63
    Prev Next


      I never, however, presumed to think of myself as a Christian apologist—the difficulties and embarrassments of faith in a disbelieving age are all there, in my fiction and poetry, as part of reality. I believed that realism even in its darkest aspect formed a homage to the God of creation, and a gesture of trust in Him. My work, as I fallibly understand it, concerns itself with issues of religion and belief from the first novel, The Poorhouse Fair, which houses an extended religious debate and a latter-day version of the stoning of Saint Stephen, to the most recent, Terrorist, which underlines the lethal dangers of any absolute supernatural faith—it makes us ruthless and disregardful of this life and this world. This world is the one we see and experience, the one we should treasure and praise. I do not think of myself as a witness to faith but as a witness to life. Even in those many works of mine in which religion plays no overt role, mundane events are considered, I like to think, religiously, as worthy of reverence and detailed evocation. Much in our lifetimes dazzles and puzzles; much invites us to doubt and despair; yet a world in which no better is imagined, and the motions of our spirits are not at all valorized, would be one not only without religion but also without art.

      My kind commender mentions “The Deacon,” a short and perhaps small story about the humble, marginal position of churches in our contemporary landscape. That dogged deacon was, in a way, my father; and also the many, including clergy, who, against the modern grain, borrow light and lightness from ancient lamps, suffer from a Sabbath compulsion, and take comfort in the periodic company of like-minded others who—to quote from “The Deacon”—“share the pride of this ancient thing that will not quite die.”

      1That is, young readers of “Ex–Basketball Player” have never seen glass-headed pumps, or gas stations selling a medley of brands of gasoline, or the word ESSO. Other irredeemably obsolete references include the first-wave trade names invoked in “A Rack of Paperbacks,” the forty-eight states and innocent patriotism of “Quilt,” and, in “Popular Revivals, 1956,” the motion picture The Last Hunt, which starred Robert Taylor and Stewart Granger.

      2“The Dogwood Tree: A Boyhood,” Assorted Prose (Knopf, 1965), p. 156.

      3“The Arrow of Time,” Scientific American, December 1975, pp. 56–69.

      4Cf., of course, the sun at the end of The Time Machine. And, of the stars, this sentence by Wells may have been in my memory: “The circling of the stars, growing slower and slower, had given place to creeping points of light.”

      5Lincoln, in his war message of July 4, 1861, found that “A disproportionate share of the federal muskets and rifles had somehow found their way into these [seceding] states, and had been seized,” that “The Navy was scattered in distant seas,” and that his efforts to reinforce Fort Pickens were frustrated by “some quasi armistice of the late administration.” In the next paragraph, however, he cashes in resoundingly the net result of the unmartial Buchanan policy: “It is thus seen that the assault upon, and reduction of, Fort Sumter, was in no sense a matter of self-defence on the part of the assailants.”

      6Samuel Eliot Morison, The Oxford History of the American People (1965), pp. 593, 608.

      7The only political story of my grandfather’s that I remember concerned the hypocrisy of abolitionist Quakers. Here is the story as told by John Hook, in The Poorhouse Fair (Knopf, 1959), pp. 92–93: “The Quakers among the city dwellers had a great reputation for good works, and in Buchanan’s day were much for passing the runaway slaves on up to Canada. Ah. But the truth of it was, this old fella who was the patriarch of the sect would harbor the negroes in the summer, when they would work his fields for nothing, and then when the cold weather came, and the crops were in, he would turn them out, when they had never known a winter before. One black man balked, you know, and the old fella standing on the doorstep said so sharp: ‘Dost thou not hear thy Master calleth thee?’ ”

      8“He … delighted more than any public man I have known in what is sometimes called ‘cronyship.’ ” (Henry S. Foote, Casket of Reminiscences [Chronicle Publishing Co., 1874], p. 113).

      9On October 5, 1901, James wrote to Sarah Orne Jewett apropos of her novel The Tory Lover: “The ‘historic’ novel is, for me, condemned, even in cases of labour as delicate as yours, to a fatal cheapness, for the simple reason that the difficulty of the job is inordinate and that a mere escamotage, in the interest of ease, and of the abysmal public naïveté becomes inevitable. You may multiply the little facts that can be got from pictures and documents, relics and prints, as much as you like—the real thing is almost impossible to do and in its essence the whole effect is as nought: I mean the invention, the representation of the old CONSCIOUSNESS, the soul, the sense, the horizon, the vision of individuals in whose minds half the things that make ours, that make the modem world, were non-existent. You have to think with your modern apparatus a man, a woman—or rather fifty—whose own thinking was intensely otherwise conditioned, you have to simplify back by an amazing tour de force—and even then it’s all humbug.” (Selected Letters of Henry James, edited by Leon Edel [Farrar, Straus & Cudahy, 1955], pp. 202–3.)

      In his introduction to The Aspern Papers in the New York edition (1909), however, James concedes “a palpable imaginable visitable past—in the nearer distances and the clearer mysteries, the marks and signs of a world we may reach over to as by making a long arm we grasp an object at the other end of our own table. The table is the one, the common expanse, and where we lean, so stretching, we find it firm and continuous. That, to my imagination, is the past fragrant of all, or of almost all, the poetry of the thing outlived and lost and gone, and yet in which the precious element of closeness, telling so of connexions but tasting so of differences, remains appreciable. With more moves back the element of the appreciable shrinks—just as the charm of looking over a garden-wall into another garden breaks down when successions of walls appear.”

      10And a possible crimp in the political fortunes of George W. Bush.

      11The fictional Northern New England Association of American Historians (Putney, Vermont), publishers of Retrospect, a tri-quarterly journal.

      12As did Professor Boyer.

      13See Odd Jobs (Knopf, 1991), p. 845, for the text of this letter.

      14See Odd Jobs (Knopf, 1991), p. 872.

      15“The town, in New England, of Tarbox, restrained from embracing the sea by a margin of tawny salt marshes, locates its downtown four miles inland up the Musquenomenee River, which ceases to be tidal at the waterfall of an old hosiery mill, now given over to the manufacture of plastic toys. It was to the mouth of this river, in May of 1634, that the small party of seventeen men, led by the younger son of the governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony—Jeremiah Tarbox being only his second in command—came in three rough skiffs with the purpose of establishing amid such an unpossessed abundance of salt hay a pastoral plantation. This, with God’s forbearance, they did.…”

      Index

      Note: Italicized numerals indicate pages with illustrations. Boldface numerals indicate pages where the author and/or work is specifically the subject of a review or prose piece.

      Abstract Expressionism, 14.1, 15.1, 16.1, 16.2, 17.1

      Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

      “Ace in the Hole” (Updike), 21.1, 21.2

      Adam, 14.1, 14.2

      Adam and Eve, fwd.1, 15.1, 17.1

      Adams, Alice

      Adams, Franklin P. (F.P.A.)

      Adoration of the Name of Jesus (El Greco)

      Adoration of the Shepherds, The (El Greco)

      Adoration of the Shepherds (Bernard)

      Aftermath (Meyerowitz), 18.1, 18.2

      After the Flood (Polidori), 18.1, 18.2, 18.3, 18.4

      Age of Innocence, The (Wharton), 11.1, 11.2

      Age of Reason

      AIDS, 10.1, 21.1, 21.2

      Aimee Semple McPherson and the Resurrection of Christian America (Sutton)

      Albion Rose (Blake)

      Alfred A. Knopf, 11.1, 11.2, 11.3, 21.1, 21.2, 21.3, 21.4


      Rabbit Run and

      All the Days and Nights (Maxwell)

      Alsop, Gulielma Fell

      altarpieces, 14.1, 14.2, 14.3, 14.4

      Altenberg, Peter

      Aman-Jean (Seurat), 16.1, 16.2, 16.3

      America America (Canin)

      “America Inside Out” (Marling)

      American Academy of Arts and Letters, 2.1, 11.1

      American art, 14.1, 15.1

      landscape painting, 15.1, 15.2, 15.3, 15.4

      American idea

      American Photobooth (Goranin)

      Ames, Elizabeth

      Amsterdam, 14.1, 14.2, 16.1

      An Béal Bocht (The Poor Mouth: A Bad Story About the Hard Life; O’Brien)

      Ancestors (Maxwell)

      Ancient of Days (Blake)

      Andersen, Hans Christian, 15.1, 15.2

      Anderson, Sherwood, 10.1, 12.1

      Angell, Roger

      Angel of the Revelation, The (Blake)

      Angelus Temple, 13.1, 13.2, 13.3, 13.4

      Anna Karenina (Tolstoy)

      Annunciation, 14.1, 14.2

      anti-Semitism, 13.1, 17.1, 17.2

      Appleton, Samuel

      Arbuckle, Fatty

      Arbus, Diane

      architecture, 15.1, 15.2, 17.1, 17.2, 20.1

      Arden, Elizabeth

      Arles, 16.1, 16.2, 16.3, 16.4

      Arp, Hans

      art, artists, fwd.1 9.1, 13.1

      see also drawings; paintings; portraits; sculpture; self-portraits; specific artists and movements

      Arte de la pintura (Pacheco)

      Artifice of Beauty, The (Pointer)

      Artist in the Country, The (Homer), 15.1, 15.2

      “Artist in the Country, The” (Karst, after Homer)

      Art Nouveau, 17.1, 17.2

      Art of Sculpture, The (Read)

      Art of the American Snapshot, 1888–1978, The, 18.1, 18.2

      Asian Americans

      Aspern Papers, The (James)

      Assorted Prose (Updike), fwd.1, fwd.2, fwd.3, fwd.4

      Atlantic Monthly

      At Swim-Two-Birds (O’Brien)

      Auchincloss, Louis

      Austrian art, 17.1, 17.2, 17.3, 17.4, 17.5

      authorship, end of

      “Autobiographical Notes” (Einstein)

      Autobiography of a Face (Grealy)

      automobiles, 18.1, 21.1, 21.2, 21.3

      Aved, Joseph

      Baargeld, Johannes Theodore, 17.1, 17.2

      “Babylon Revisited” (Fitzgerald), 9.1, 10.1

      Backward Glance, A (Wharton)

      Bacon, Francis

      Bailey, Anthony, 15.1, 15.2

      Bailey, Blake

      Bailey, Colin B.

      Baldwin, James, 10.1, 10.2

      Barber, Miller

      Bargue, Charles

      Barron, Louis

      Barth, John, 8.1, 21.1

      Barth, Karl, 9.1, 13.1

      Barthelme, Donald, 8.1, 10.1, 21.1, 21.2

      baseball

      “Basically Decent” (Updike), fwd.1, 11.1

      “Basium XVI” (Updike), fwd.1, 7.1

      Basket of Wild Strawberries (Chardin)

      Basten, Fred E.

      Bauhaus, the

      Baxandall, Michael

      Baxter, Charles

      Bay of Baiae, with Apollo and the Sibyl, The (Turner)

      Beaton, David, 10.1, 10.2

      Beaton, James

      “Beatrice Palmato” (Wharton)

      Beattie, Ann, 10.1, 10.2

      beauty, 17.1, 17.2, 17.3

      Bech: A Book (Updike)

      Bech: His Oeuvre (Updike)

      Bech at Bay (Updike)

      Bech Is Back (Updike), 21.1, 21.2

      Beckett, Samuel, 11.1, 11.2, 21.1

      Beckmann, Max, 17.1, 17.2, 17.3, 17.4, 17.5

      Bedroom, The (de Hooch), 14.1, 14.2

      Before Photography (art show)

      Bel Canto (Patchett)

      Belgium, 11.1, 16.1, 16.2, 17.1

      Bellini, Giovanni

      Belloc, Hilaire, 21.1, 21.2

      Bellow, Saul, 10.1, 10.2, 10.3

      Beloved (Morrison)

      “Beloved, The” (Updike), fwd.1 5.1

      Bélugou, Léon

      Bend Sinister (Nabokov)

      Bendz, Wilhelm

      Ben-Hur (movie)

      Bercovici, Konrad

      Berenson, Bernard, 11.1, 11.2

      Bergson, Henri, 8.1, 8.2, 21.1

      Berkeley, George

      Berlin, 15.1, 17.1, 17.2, 19.1, 19.2

      Bernanke, Ben S.

      Bernard, Émile, 16.1, 16.2

      Berry, John

      Best American Short Stories of the Century, The (Updike and Kenison, eds.)

      “Best Possible View” (McCarron-Cates)

      Bethell, Augusta (Gussie)

      Betjeman, Sir John

      Bier, Justis

      “Billie Dyer” (Maxwell)

      “Birthmates” (Jen)

      Bishop, Elizabeth

      Bismarck, Otto von

      Black, Daniel

      Black, Jeremiah

      Black-Haired Girl with Raised Skirt (Schiele)

      black humorists

      blacks, 10.1, 10.2, 11.1, 13.1, 13.2, 21.1, 21.2, 21.3, 21.4

      in Morrison’s novels

      in Run

      in The Story of a Marriage

      Blake, Catherine, 15.1, 15.2, 15.3

      Blake, William, 15.1, 15.2, 15.3, 21.1

      “Blake in His Time” (Butler)

      Blessed Virgin Chastises the Infant Jesus Before Three Witnesses, The: A.B., P.E., and the Artist (Ernst), 17.1, 17.2

      Bloemink, Barbara, 15.1, 15.2

      Bluest Eye, The (Morrison)

      Blumhofer, Edith

      Blümmer, Rudolf

      Blute-Fin Mill, The (van Gogh), 16.1, 16.2

      Boat on the Beach by Moonlight (Friedrich)

      Boats at Sea, Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer (van Gogh)

      Boccaccio, Giovanni

      Bogan, Louise, 11.1, 11.2

      Bonington, Richard Parkes

      book-reviewing, poetics of

      books

      defense of the amateur reader of

      end of authorship and

      booksellers, bookstores

      Bo-Peep (Girl with a Shepherd’s Crook Seated by a Tree) (Homer)

      Borchert, Till-Holger

      Borges, Jorge Luis, 8.1, 21.1

      Born, Max, 19.1, 19.2

      Börsch-Supan, Helmut

      Boston, Mass., 20.1, 20.2, 20.3, 20.4, 20.5, 20.6, 21.1

      in Run

      Boston Herald

      Bouquet of Carnations, Tuberoses and Sweet Peas in a White Porcelain Vase with Blue Decorations (Chardin)

      Bowen, Elizabeth

      Boyer, Paul

      Boy Handing a Woman a Basket in a Doorway (de Hooch)

      Bradbury, Ray

      Bradstreet, Anne, 20.1, 20.2, 20.3, 20.4

      Bradstreet, Simon, 20.1, 20.2, 20.3, 20.4

      Brancusi, Constantin, 17.1, 17.2

      Braque, Georges

      Brave New World (Huxley), 21.1, 21.2

      Breton, André, 17.1, 17.2, 17.3, 17.4

      Breton Women in the Meadow (Bernard)

      “Bright and Morning Star” (Wright), 10.1, 10.2

      Bright Center of Heaven (Maxwell), 11.1, 11.2, 11.3

      Brioche, The (Chardin)

      British Museum, 21.1, 21.2

      Brodkey, Harold

      Bromfield, Louis

      brothels, 13.1, 16.1

      Brownstein, Gabriel

      Brueghel, Pieter, the Elder

      Bryant, William Cullen

      Buchanan, James, fwd.1, 21.1, 21.2

      Buchanan Dying (Updike)

      Buffet (Chardin)

      Bukowski, Charles

      “Bulgarian Poetess, The” (Updike)

      “Burial in the Desert” (Fenton)

      Burial of the Count of Orgaz, The (El Greco)

      Burkhardt, Barbara

      Burns, Robert

      Burroughs, Edgar Rice, 19.1, 19.2

      Bush, Geoffrey

    &nb
    sp; Bush, George W.

      Butler, Marilyn

      Butler, Ralph

      Byron, George Gordon, Lord

      “Cafeteria, Mass. General Hospital” (Updike), fwd.1, 7.1

      Cain, James M.

      Caldwell, Erskine

      California, 13.1, 13.2, 19.1, 21.1

      Calverley, Charles Stuart

      Calvin, John

      Calvinism

      cameras, 18.1, 18.2

      Camping Out in the Adirondacks (Homer)

      Camus, Albert

      Candide (Voltaire), 8.1, 8.2

      Canin, Ethan

      Carduff, Christopher, 11.1, 11.2, 11.3

      Carpentered Hen and Other Tame Creatures, The (Updike)

      cartoons and comic strips

      Carvaggio, Michelangelo da

      Carver, Raymond, 9.1, 10.1, 10.2

      Cary, Joyce

      Casket of Reminiscences (Foote)

      Caspar David Friedrich (Börsch-Supan)

      Caspar David Friedrich and the Subject of Landscape (Koerner)

      Cather, Willa, 10.1, 11.1, 11.2

      Catherine the Great

      Cat’s Cradle (Vonnegut)

      Celebes (Ernst), 17.1, 17.2

      Cellar Boy, The (Chardin), 14.1, 14.2

      Cellini, Benvenuto

      censorship

      Centaur, The (Updike), 21.1, 21.2, 21.3, 21.4

      Cervantes, Miguel de

      Cézanne, Paul, 9.1, 14.1, 14.2, 15.1, 16.1, 16.2, 17.1, 17.2

      Chaplin, Charlie, 13.1, 19.1, 19.2

      Chardin, Jean-Siméon, 14.1, 14.2, 14.3, 14.4

      Chase, Mary Ellen

      Chase, Stuart

      Château, The (Maxwell)

      Cheever, Benjamin, 11.1, 11.2, 11.3

      Cheever, Federico (Fred), 11.1, 11.2

      Cheever, Frederick

      Cheever, John, fwd.1, 10.1, 11.1, 21.1

      Cheever, Mary Winternitz, 11.1, 11.2, 11.3

      Cheever, Susan, 11.1, 11.2, 11.3

      Cheever (Bailey)

      Chekhov, Anton

      Chernobyl, 18.1, 18.2

      chess, fwd.1, 10.1

      Chesterton, G. K.

      Chevreul, Michel-Eugène

      childhood, children, 11.1, 16.1, 17.1

      in de Hooch, 14.1, 14.2, 14.3, 14.4

      in Købke, 15.1, 15.2

      laughter of, 8.1, 8.2

      Lear and, 15.1, 15.2, 15.3

      in Nabokov

      photos of, 18.1, 18.2

      Child in White (Seurat)

      Child with a Top (Chardin)

      “Chimney-Sweeper, The” (Blake)

      China, Chinese, 12.1, 13.1, 13.2, 13.3, 21.1

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026