by Dale
I took Tori to the Portland State library so
she could read some articles for a paper she's writing. She studies
steadily, with a calm discipline that amazes me. Read her way carefully
through two articles in difficult academic journals, taking careful
notes. She's old enough to look perfectly at home in a college library,
now. Gave me a curious twinge.
As did wandering through the stacks at PSU.
Wandered up to the Middle English section and pulled down my only
publication (Chaucer Review, 1991 -- "Anelida and Arcite: Anti-Feminist
Allegory, Pro-Feminist Complaint." Check the big department
stores and airport bookstalls; bound to be copies there.) There
I am, in all my glory -- quoting in French, Latin, and Italian (what
a fraud! I knew not a word of Italian). Making a trendy and somewhat
dubious argument. But it was a good reading of Chaucer's poem. Even
at my worst, I've always been a sensitive reader.
And my footnotes are -- still -- magnificent.
The only genre I've ever mastered is the footnote. The magisterial
evaluation, the wry aside, the six-line demolition of unworthy critics,
the hinting at vast learning and contemplation held in reserve --
I had it all.
Odd that I published that. I had already given
up on an academic career when it was accepted. I had, in fact, forgotten
that I'd sent it off, when I got the acceptance. It was an early
chapter of one of my dissertations: sending it out may in fact have
been a sort of surrender on ever finishing a dissertation. "Here:
there's a piece out of all this wreck that might be worth saving,
but there ain't no book here, I know that!"
A vanished life. And one just blossoming. And
an accidental, grizzle-bearded father walking through the sour book-dust
of his past.
Not a past I look back on fondly, for the most
part. Like so much of my past, I mostly just feel grateful that
I escaped from it more or less intact. So much of my past is a tangle
of false hopes and masquerade. Pretending to know Italian, pretending
that I'd read all of the Teseida in the original, is pretty typical
of my past. I'm glad to be in the present. I carry on my various
poses and pretences for only minutes at a time now, rather than
years. It's a sweet, hard-bought freedom.
[Enjoy more of Dale's postings at mole.]
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