Hello again, dear reader. During our
last discussion, we pontificated on why everyone should be reading Jane Austin.
However, for today's discussion, I thought we would pontificate on why everyone
who is able to do so, should be reading at least some "classic"
literary works, whether it is Don Quixote or Shakespeare or Dickens, or Post
the author and title doesn't really matter. What is important is that as
readers and fans of literature, we are engaging with the classics and finding
interesting and unique ways to apply their lessons to our modern society. In
fact, this is why certain works of literature are in fact considered classics
because their lessons can easily be applied to modern times, even though they
were written several hundred, and in some cases, several thousand years ago.
Hopefully this discussion will inspire readers young and old alike to take a
new look at a "classic" literary work...
Let us begin with a few suggested
definitions.
1) The classics are the books of
which we usually hear people say: “I am rereading…” and never “I am reading….”
This at least happens among those
who consider themselves “very well read.” It does not hold true for young
people at the age when they first encounter the world and the classics as a
part of that world.
The reiterative prefix before the
verb “read” may be a small hypocrisy on the part of people ashamed to admit
they have not read a famous book. To reassure them, we need only observe that,
however vast any person’s basic reading may be, there still remain an enormous
number of fundamental works that he has not read.
Hands up, anyone who has read the
whole of Herodotus and the whole of Thucydides! And Saint-Simon? And Cardinal
de Retz? But even the great nineteenth-century cycles of novels are more often
talked about than read. In France they begin to read Balzac in school, and
judging by the number of copies in circulation, one may suppose that they go on
reading him even after that, but if a Gallup poll were taken in Italy, I’m
afraid that Balzac would come in practically last. Dickens fans in Italy form an
tiny elite; as soon as its members meet, they begin to chatter about characters
and episodes as if they were discussing people and things of their own
acquaintance. Years ago, while teaching in America, Michel Butor got fed up
with being asked about Emile Zola, whom he had never read, so he made up his
mind to read the entire Rougon-Macquart cycle. He found it was
completely different from what he had thought: a fabulous mythological and cosmological
family tree, which he went on to describe in a wonderful essay.
In other words, to read a great book
for the first time in one’s adult life is an extraordinary pleasure, different
from (though one cannot say greater or lesser than) the pleasure of having read
it in one’s youth. Youth brings to reading, as to any other experience, a
particular flavor and a particular sense of importance, whereas in maturity one
appreciates (or ought to appreciate) many more details and levels and meanings.
We may therefore attempt the next definition:
2) We use the word “classics” for
those books that are treasured by those who have read and loved them; but they
are treasured no less by those who have the luck to read them for the first
time and in the best conditions to enjoy them.
In fact, reading in youth can be
rather unfruitful, owing to impatience, distraction, inexperience with the
product’s “instructions for use,” and inexperience in life itself. Books read
then can be (possibly at one and the same time) formative, in the sense that
they give a form to future experiences, providing models, terms of comparison,
schemes for classification, scales of value, exemplars of beauty—all things
that continue to operate even if the book read in one’s youth is almost or
totally forgotten. If we reread the book at a mature age we are likely to
rediscover these constants, which by this time are part of our inner mechanisms,
but whose origins we have long forgotten. A literary work can succeed in making
us forget it as such, but it leaves its seed in us. The definition we can give
is therefore this:
3) The classics are books that exert
a peculiar influence, both when they refuse to be eradicated from the mind and
when they conceal themselves in the folds of memory, camouflaging themselves as
the collective or individual unconscious.
There should therefore be a time in
adult life devoted to revisiting the most important books of our youth. Even if
the books have remained the same (though they do change, in the light of an
altered historical perspective), we have most certainly changed, and our
encounter will be an entirely new thing.
Hence, whether we use the verb “read”
or the verb “reread” is of little importance. Indeed, we may say:
4) Every rereading of a classic is
as much a voyage of discovery as the first reading.
5) Every reading of a classic is in
fact a rereading.
Definition 4 may be considered a
corollary of this next one:
6) A classic is a book that has
never finished saying what it has to say.
Whereas definition 5 depends on a
more specific formula, such as this:
7) The classics are the books that
come down to us bearing upon them the traces of readings previous to ours, and
bringing in their wake the traces they themselves have left on the culture or
cultures they have passed through (or, more simply, on language and customs).
All this is true both of the ancient
and of the modern classics. If I read the Odyssey I read Homer’s text,
but I cannot forget all that the adventures of Ulysses have come to mean in the
course of the centuries, and I cannot help wondering if these meanings were
implicit in the text, or whether they are incrustations or distortions or
expansions. When reading Kafka, I cannot avoid approving or rejecting the
legitimacy of the adjective “Kafkaesque,” which one is likely to hear every
quarter of an hour, applied indiscriminately. If I read Turgenev’s Fathers
and Sons or Dostoevsky’s The Possessed, I cannot help thinking how
these characters have continued to be reincarnated right down to our own day.
The reading of a classic ought to
give us a surprise or two vis-à-vis; the notion that we had of it. For this
reason I can never sufficiently highly recommend the direct reading of the text
itself, leaving aside the critical biography, commentaries, and interpretations
as much as possible. Schools and universities ought to help us to understand
that no book that talks about a book says more than the book in
question, but instead they do their level best to make us think the opposite.
There is a very widespread topsyturviness of values whereby the introduction,
critical apparatus, and bibliography are used as a smoke screen to hide what
the text has to say, and, indeed, can say only if left to speak for itself
without intermediaries who claim to know more than the text does. We may
conclude that:
8) A classic does not necessarily
teach us anything we did not know before. In a classic we sometimes discover
something we have always known (or thought we knew), but without knowing that
this author said it first, or at least is associated with it in a special way.
And this, too, is a surprise that gives a lot of pleasure, such as we always
gain from the discovery of an origin, a relationship, an affinity. From all
this we may derive a definition of this type:
9) The classics are books that we
find all the more new, fresh, and unexpected upon reading, the more we thought
we knew them from hearing them talked about.
Naturally, this only happens when a
classic really works as such—that is, when it establishes a personal rapport
with the reader. If the spark doesn’t come, that’s a pity; but we do not read
the classics out of duty or respect, but only out of love. Except at school.
And school should enable you to know, either well or badly, a certain number of
classics among which—or in reference to which—you can then choose your
classics. School is obliged to give you the instruments needed to make a
choice, but the choices that count are those that occur outside and after
school.
It is only by reading without bias
that you might possibly come across the book that becomes your book. I
know an excellent art historian, an extraordinarily well-read man, who out of all
the books there are has focused his special love on the Pickwick Papers;
at every opportunity he comes up with some quip from Dickens’s book, and
connects each and every event in life with some Pickwickian episode. Little by
little he himself, and true philosophy, and the universe, have taken on the
shape and form of the Pickwick Papers by a process of complete
identification. In this way we arrive at a very lofty and demanding notion of
what a classic is:
10) We use the word “classic” for a
book that takes the form of an equivalent to the universe, on a level with the
ancient talismans. With this definition we are approaching the idea of the
“total book,” as Mallarmé conceived of it.
But a classic can establish an
equally strong rapport in terms of opposition and antithesis. Everything that
Jean-Jacques Rousseau thinks and does is very dear to my heart, yet everything
fills me with an irrepressible desire to contradict him, to criticize him, to
quarrel with him. It is a question of personal antipathy on a temperamental
level, on account of which I ought to have no choice but not to read him; and
yet I cannot help numbering him among my authors. I will therefore say:
11) Your classic author is
the one you cannot feel indifferent to, who helps you to define yourself in
relation to him or her, and even in dispute with them.
I think there is no need to justify
myself for using the word “classic” without making distinctions about age,
style, or authority. What distinguishes the classic, in the argument I am
making, may be only an echo effect that holds good both for an ancient work and
for a modern one that has already achieved its place in a cultural continuum.
We might say:
12) A classic is a book that comes before
other classics; but anyone who has read the others first, and then reads this
one, instantly recognizes its place in the family tree.
At this point I can no longer put
off the vital problem of how to relate the reading of the classics to the
reading of all the other books that are anything but classics. It is a problem
connected with such questions as, why read the classics rather than concentrate
on books that enable us to understand our own times more deeply? Or, where
shall we find the time and peace of mind to read the classics, overwhelmed as
we are by the avalanche of current events?
We can, of course, imagine some
blessed soul who devotes his reading time exclusively to Lucretius, Lucian,
Montaigne, Erasmus, Quevedo, Marlowe, the Discourse on Method, Wilhelm
Meister, Coleridge, Ruskin, Proust, and Valéry, with a few forays in the
direction of Murasaki or the Icelandic sagas, And all this without having to
write reviews of the latest publications, or papers to compete for a university
chair, or articles for magazines on tight deadlines. To keep up such a diet
without any contamination, this blessed soul would have to abstain from reading
the newspapers, and never be tempted by the latest novel or sociological
investigation. But we have to see how far such rigor would be either justified
or profitable. The latest news may well be banal or mortifying, but it
nonetheless remains a point at which to stand and look both backward and
forward. To be able to read the classics you have to know “from where” you are
reading them; otherwise both the book and the reader will be lost in a timeless
cloud. This, then, is the reason why the greatest “yield” from reading the
classics will be obtained by someone who knows how to alternate them with the
proper dose of current affairs. And this does not necessarily imply a state of
imperturbable inner calm. It can also be the fruit of nervous impatience, of a
huffing-and-puffing discontent of mind.
Maybe the ideal thing would be to
hearken to current events as we do to the din outside the window that informs
us about traffic jams and sudden changes in the weather, while we listen to the
voice of the classics sounding clear and articulate inside the room. But it is
already a lot for most people if the presence of the classics is perceived as a
distant rumble far outside a room that is swamped by the trivia of the moment,
as by a television at full blast. Let us therefore add:
13) A classic is something that
tends to relegate the concerns of the moment to the status of background noise,
but at the same time this background noise is something we cannot do without.
14) A classic is something that
persists as a background noise even when the most incompatible momentary
concerns are in control of the situation.
There remains the fact that reading
the classics appears to clash with our rhythm of life, which no longer affords
long periods of time or the spaciousness of humanistic leisure. It also
contradicts the eclecticism of our culture, which would never be capable of
compiling a catalog of things classical such as would suit our needs.
These latter conditions were fully
realized in the case of Leopardi, given his solitary life in his father’s house
(his “paterno ostello“), his cult of Greek and Latin antiquity, and the
formidable library put at his disposal by his father, Monaldo. To which we may
add the entire body of Italian literature and of French literature, with the
exception of novels and the “latest thing out” in general, all of which were at
least swept off into the sidelines, there to comfort the leisure of his sister
Paolina (“your Stendhal,” he wrote her once). Even with his intense
interest in science and history, he was often willing to rely on texts that
were not entirely up-to-date, taking the habits of birds from Buffon, the
mummies of Frederik Ruysch from Fontanelle, the voyage of Columbus from
Robertson.
In this day and age a classical
education like the young Leopardi’s is unthinkable; above all, Count Monaldo’s
library has multiplied explosively. The ranks of the old titles have been
decimated, while new ones have proliferated in all modern literatures and
cultures. There is nothing for it but for all of us to invent our own ideal
libraries of classics. I would say that such a library ought to be composed
half of books we have read and that have really counted for us, and half of
books we propose to read and presume will come to count—leaving a section of
empty shelves for surprises and occasional discoveries.
I realize that Leopardi is the only
name I have cited from Italian literature—a result of the explosion of the
library. Now I ought to rewrite the whole article to make it perfectly clear
that the classics help us to understand who we are and where we stand, a
purpose for which it is indispensable to compare Italians with foreigners and
foreigners with Italians.
Then I ought to rewrite it yet again
lest anyone believe that the classics ought to be read because they “serve any
purpose” whatever. The only reason one can possibly adduce is that to read the
classics is better than not to read the classics.
And if anyone objects that it is not
worth taking so much trouble, then I will quote Cioran (who is not yet a
classic, but will become one):
While they were preparing the
hemlock, Socrates was learning a tune on the flute. “What good will it do you,”
they asked, “to know this tune before you die?”
As always dear reader, thanks for
listening, and there will be more to come soon guaranteed.
You made some good points about why classics should be read. My definition of a classic is a very good book liked by lots people that stands the test of time. There are children's classics (Charlotte's Web, Little Women, Alice in Wonderland, Through the Looking Glass, etc.) that all young people should know. If children are introduced to classics at a young age, they will hopefully grow to read them themselves; and, perhaps, learn to love reading classics the rest of their lives. My parents gave me the love of reading, first by reading to me, then by taking me to the library and helping me choose great books (mostly classics)that I would read to myself. To this day I still have the love of reading. Thanks for stating how important the classics are to society. Remember - reading is recreation for the intelligent.
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