One Holy Reason to Love
(Image provided by The Drifter)
“Kerouac could write everything because he never forgot
anything.” – Bob Dylan
“I saw you this morning…in my secret life.” – Leonard Cohen
Scholars of literature always call Edgar Allan Poe the first writer in America who ever tried to make a living using nothing other than his own pen. And that is very far from true, very, very far from true.
Poe never tried to make a living in America using nothing other than his own pen. He always knew he would need another job, whether that was in the U.S. Army or as a low-wage wage slave working for other peoples’ publications where much of what he did as a “job” had absolutely nothing to do with his own creative writing, on the surface at least.
What Poe did try to do, and what he can be called “the first” at doing in many ways in America, was to try and live a truly literary life at every level, no matter what else he also needed to do in the meantime.
Every demeaning task, every humbling action, every humiliating circumstance in his life, and there were many millions of all the above, Poe tried to convert into something sacred that could be seen as serving the literary life he always made himself live for his own pride, even when it seemed impossible.
Poe never let himself forget he was a writer. He elevated it above everything else, above politics, above religion, above family, even; or rather he made it so much a part of his life that everything else, politics, religion, family, all grew out of his starting point, which was his commitment to writing as an art.
This profound innovation, which is more relevant now than it was 200 years ago when Poe made it, has had an endless series of influences on all the arts, not just writing, all over the globe, not just in the USA.
It probably caught fire in France first, when Charles Baudelaire, the first true poet of the modern city, took up the call that Poe had issued to the writers of the world.
Baudelaire identified so strongly with Poe that it’s said he would pray to Poe nightly, as if Poe were a saint. When we consider Charles Baudelaire’s Catholic background, this doesn’t seem nearly so crazy as it might appear at first glance to many of us.
In the religion Baudelaire was raised in, praying to saints was not only not frowned upon, it was encouraged. Baudelaire’s move, which was to make the Art-for-art’s-sake Edgar Allan Poe into his own private literary saint, was really only moving the material he was given at birth an inch or two to the right or left. It was the higher ideal of the truthful and imaginative writing life that Baudelaire was really placing on the pedestal, in the manner of his hero, and saint, Edgar Allan Poe.
Baudelaire wrote in the shadow of Victor Hugo, a writer as massive, deep and wide as Charles Dickens, but it is now Baudelaire, in his Paris Spleen, Flowers of Evil, and Artificial Paradises (hashish, laudanum, absinthe, and literature), who generally seems more modern to most poetry lovers.
Hugo the realist, as great as ever still, was of his own time. Baudelaire, following in the footsteps of Edgar Allan Poe, was for the future. Like Poe, he foresaw, and even lived in, the age when humans would become ghosts of themselves (for good and ill), the time when the new rule would be (and is): turn your own life into an art, or die, mentally, emotionally, spiritually, and even literally.
The life-as-art, art-as-life, consequences-be-damned credo and way of living was elevated perhaps even higher by Vincent Van Gogh, especially in his self portraits, or in Sherlock Holmes and Irene Adler, whose laser-like, scientific focus on artful truth-telling rises straight from the beautiful and terrifying mists of Poe’s profound innovation, where the responsibility for everything is placed squarely on your own doorstep, even, or especially, if you are a starving artist.
Here are four ways any and all of us can instantly start turning our lives into an art and an art form almost immediately. If you’re already doing these things, and I have no doubt that some of you are: then bravo for you. Keep it up, and spread the word!
ONE: Texting
Do not become the mental slave of your own (what I like to call) texting device. Never send a text that has been written for you by a robot, AI or other computer; and never send an emoji that has not been specifically selected by you to be extremely pertinent to the exact circumstances at hand.
If use emojis you must, feel free to do so: but be creative. Go deeper. Look for the ones that say what you really mean to say. And be sure you know what it is that you really mean to say. If you don’t really mean to say it, don’t just say it, blindly. This is you putting yourself out there into the world, and this is the inevitable way people communicate now, at this moment in history, for a million different reasons.
Texting is too easy to do, but it doesn’t have to be. Take the time to say what you really mean: or don’t say it at all. And when you choose silence, choose it for a very definite reason; know what that reason is; know why you are choosing to exercise your own silence; don’t just ghost people because you are bored – or lazy.
If the time has come for you to be quiet, know why you are doing it.
TWO: Emails
Be creative when you compose emails. Even be creative when composing emails if it’s in a situation where you are not supposed to be creative, or maybe especially then. If being creative will get you frowned upon and called onto the carpet, be as creative as you can possibly be, even unto the point of being shown the door by the robot-humans in charge eventually. Don’t dumb down your own language too much in order to be “safe” or in order to please your masters, and make sure your own individual personality-stamp goes out with every single communication you ever send. Even if you’re just telling someone you need them to do something for you by Tuesday. Or maybe especially then.
THREE: The “Comments” Section
Be very, very, very selective about what kinds of “Comments” sections you choose to engage with. And when you do find a good one and have chosen to engage with it, go all the way. Doing anything in life in a half-assed way is nothing more than a half-assed way of doing things. Make sure you’re not just shouting into the void by repeating the exact same things a million other people are also saying.
Choose wisely, and be selective, and make a full commitment; let your opinions shine forth only if they are genuine, original, dyed-in-the-wool personal opinions based on the reality of the world, not just group-speak mind-control thought-police regurgitations of the exact same thing everyone else is also saying ad infinitum.
Another way of putting it is this: be original. Always be original. If you can’t be original here, it’s OK: choose silence, and be original in a different venue where you feel like you’re on more solid ground.
Regarding size of audience, Jesus himself said this: “Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the middle of them.”
There was a reason why he emphasized the tiny numbers two or three, just as he limited his personal disciples to another tiny number, twelve. Jesus was the strongest advocate for individuality this Planet has ever known, which is why he is, by far, the most famous person who has ever lived, or ever will live. And he spent a lot more time walking away from the churches and marketplaces of his day than he did walking into them.
FOUR: Pictures of You
Do not use the camera on your phone to celebrate the American Religion, CONSUMERISM. Do not use the camera on your phone to advertise the dead animals or the vegan delights you are about to sink your teeth into (everyone needs to eat and digest) unless you can really make it artistic. Also, do not use your camera as a way to provide just another screen between you and the reality of the world. Instead, use the camera on your phone for the following three reasons.
One: To try and capture moments of beauty which are beautiful, or to create beauty by making something beautiful which people don’t usually think of as “beautiful.”
Two: To relate yourself to the real world around you by showing yourself and others “It” from new, original, and different perspectives. (This is called “Imagination.”)
Three: Use the camera on your phone as a form of SELF exploration.
Do not take selfies. Make self portraits. Even if the only one who ever studies them is you, this will make you an endlessly deeper and more original person in everything else you do and do not do (what we DO NOT do is just as important as what we do), IF you do this in the right way, which is to do it the way Socrates said to use the mirror: Look for yourself, and study the endless changes which are “you,” with fascination. (This is something Shakespeare did in his Sonnets.)
Most people are only terrified of death when they never really live/d first. Always start with yourself first. Move outward from there.
A NOTE on reading from The Drifter: What you take into yourself is just as important as what you put out into the world, and what you put out into the world will, inevitably, be massively influenced by whatever you have spent your time taking into yourself.
Watching a truly great movie is a much more artistic experience than reading a truly bad book.
But the act of personally reading good things will strengthen the mind (and hence the personality) in a more powerful way than anything else on Planet Earth. This has been true for thousands of years, and will remain true now until “the end” (whenever it comes).
Alexander the Great’s most prized personal possession was his copy of The Iliad. Abraham Lincoln spent more time reading Shakespeare and the Bible than he did studying war plans or political suggestions. Martin Luther King, Jr., was always reading good things. He never would’ve been able to write or think so well otherwise: and he knew it.
The poet William Blake was not joking when he said he wrote mostly for “children and angels.” Personally, my conception of Heaven also includes forms of reading. If I’m wrong about this, it’s highly doubtful I will be aware of it; so I’m going with this for now. (It’s also probably true that by “angels” Blake meant both literal angels, and saintly humans.)
If one fills one’s mind with trash, nothing but trash, and more trash, eventually (or sooner) the mind itself will become a trash dump. Right about then is when real and deep ignorance, cynicism, scorn for the good of the world, and nihilism begin to set in. (Many of these people are walking around and looking like respectable members of society, too; even as we speak.)
Good Sunday, Drifter
You make outstanding points. I have no doubt that there were dreadful writers before the “Information Age,” but the computer society has freed them from the “tyranny” of having to make the grade.
Most writers I see today appear to be convinced by the ease of the task. They are the bad writers–not necessarily in just what they put out (which does stink), but in attitude. Writing itself means no more to them than a selfie. They mean to get rich. I could gentle my language here and say “seem” and such, but nothing else makes sense.
I hope that in time the waves of terrible writers who do not take the art seriously will fall off and allow people who can do it (such as you, the Drifter) more space; more contact with people who know how to read. Knowing how to read, as you know, is a different skill that is developed through reading good material and has nothing to do with basic literacy.
The determination of the good and great writers is something that constantly astonishes people. If it does, then they know nothing about it.
A remarkable post! You are able to simplify complicated thoughts without dumbing them down.
Leila
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Irene
Your comments are better than my column but they’re both part of the dialogue, like in a Shakespeare screenplay, screen/play or a play on screen!
And the coolest thing about it is that we’re both on the same page.
I fear the numbers of those whom Van Morrison called “THEM” is indeed large right now, to the point of a force of nature. (“Man has invented his doom,” Dylan.) This fact is one of the things that haunted both Poe and Kafka.
THANKS for inspiring “One Holy Reason to Love” in many seen and unseen ways, Irene!
D
PS I recommend Leadbelly’s version of “Goodnight, Irene”
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A very interesting post. I agree with what Leila has already said that it is to be hoped that those writers who are doing it purely as a way of making money, or seeking some sort of feeble fame will eventually move along – I don’t know how much we can hope for that though in these odd days of ‘celebrity’ and ‘influencers’.
Something that insisted on being acknowledged as I read this though. When a person has a good education, wide based and wide reaching and lives in a world where it is pefectly acceptable to be even slighly different – more power to them and I applaud the strength and determination that is needed to plough their own furrow and tread their chosen path. But! There are those of us, and I am definitely one, who were expected to toe narrow lines, who were expected to follow certain paths and for the love of near and dear ones did that, not rocking boats or stirring up ripples. I think it is a sort of weakness, but also a form of torture holding a different person inside. By the time I was able to idulge my passion for writing I was a woman beyond a certain age! and so there has not been the time to polish and refine what I write and I have to be pleased with what I have done and sigh for the years when I didn’t sip absinth and starve in a garret!
I do like the suggestions that address simple things that we all do everyday – texting, snap shotting, emailing and indeed I do try to think about the bits of me that go out into the ether and often write a comment and then look at the numbers and see that five hundred people have already reacted and leave my opinion unexpressed because by that stage, many others will have had the same thoughts and to repeat them is wasteful. Anyway, enough blather from France. Thank you for this Drifter. dd
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Dear Diane
Hello! Thank you so much for your excellent thoughts and readerly reactions to this week’s Drifter installment. You gave The Drifter much to ponder and think about in your feedback, and I really enjoyed hearing your reactions to this piece, it’s very much appreciated. Having started your literary career a bit later in life, you have set a great and fine example for everyone in showing that life never ends and new things are always possible.
William Wordsworth talked about “compensation” in the second half of life. We all lose so much as the years pass by, but the ones who are awake know for sure that there are corresponding compensations that also happen. Your writing career is a shining example of that!
Dale
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Hey Drifter
I like any and everything about Poe! This is a great topic, well written, wholly interesting. The idea of “The life-as-art, art-as-life,” is something that has gained traction in my life. The writing life sometimes feels like it’s going nowhere and everywhere at the same time. That bipolar high and low we have spoken about in the past.
Once a person searches real life–consciously, looking for such things as inspiration or the crash of a water glass to soak up with the pen. They have stepped into the official kingdom of the writer’s realm. Taking bad times, bad noises, bad jobs, bad people, and putting them to the keyboard is a cathartic and artful process.
The slavery of these jobs (this Industrial DE-revolution–and they make you feel guilty as hell if you don’t have one) is a reality that could push anyone over the edge into the quick fix and long term consequence of substance abuse. I love the mention of those seedy mysterious opium based drugs like Laudanum and the most mysterious of all–like some kind of elixir–absinthe.
Good ideas on how not to get sucked into the vortex of automation. Letting some machine and software to do your own thinking and writing. It’s hard enough to develop a voice. Then to give it up by an insidious laziness that people seek is not good. Not good for the writer sending these electronic bursts, but a great way to DE-socialize oneself fully into the misanthrope.
These insights on originality are so true. Your idea of comments coming from the real person vs group-think and pleasing the hive is spot on!
Love the way you described Jesus walking as much away from churches and the market place as to them. That is very cool! Yes where there are two…
Your writing continues to amaze me! Such insights on this electronic sheen of crap that is not the gossamer of nature. But the “Turn of the Screw,” more and more.
Christopher
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CJA
Thank you!
One reason Poe was selected as a focus for this Drifter installment was because of our mutual interest in him. Thanks for the inspiration at every level!
Your own writing shows that you yourself very much live the life of the real writer; your accomplishments in the art of writing could not have happened without a steely determination, courage, bravery, dedication, combined with the natural talent and ability, AND the experience of life.
This series of comments I’m responding to right now is brilliant! Every line you’ve written here is quotable and leaps out at the reader as both hard-core wisdom AND poetry in prose.
There are wise philosophers who can’t write and skillful writers who fall (very much) short on the wisdom-of-life aspect of things.
The way that you combine both is both powerful and one-of-a-kind, strong and original.
Thanks again!
D
PS
Your comments are not just readable, they are more than that, they are very much RE-readable (worthy of study)…they shed new light with each separate perusal.
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