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Date: Sun, 18 Dec 2005 23:11:17 -0500 (EST)
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Subject: Reflections in the Evening Land

Reflections in the Evening Land

The celebrated critic Harold Bloom, despairing of
contemporary America, turns to his bookshelves to
understand the trajectory of his country

Harold Bloom
Guardian (UK)
Saturday December 17, 2005
http://books.guardian.co.uk/departments/classics/story/0,6000,1669276,00.html

Huey Long, known as "the Kingfish," dominated the
state of Louisiana from 1928 until his
assassination in 1935, at the age of 42.
Simultaneously governor and a United States
senator, the canny Kingfish uttered a prophecy
that haunts me in this late summer of 2005, 70
years after his violent end: "Of course we will
have fascism in America but we will call it
democracy!"

I reflected on Huey Long (always mediated for me
by his portrait as Willie Stark in Robert Penn
Warren's novel, All the King's Men) recently,
when I listened to President George W Bush
addressing the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Salt
Lake City, Utah. I was thus benefited by Rupert
Murdoch's Fox TV channel, which is the voice of
Bushian crusading democracy, very much of the
Kingfish's variety. Even as Bush extolled his
Iraq adventure, his regime daily fuses more
tightly together elements of oligarchy,
plutocracy, and theocracy.

At the age of 75, I wonder if the Democratic
party ever again will hold the presidency or
control the Congress in my lifetime. I am not
sanguine, because our rulers have demonstrated
their prowess in Florida (twice) and in Ohio at
shaping voting procedures, and they control the
Supreme Court. The economist-journalist Paul
Krugman recently observed that the Republicans
dare not allow themselves to lose either Congress
or the White House, because subsequent
investigations could disclose dark matters
indeed. Krugman did not specify, but among the
profiteers of our Iraq crusade are big oil (House
of Bush/House of Saud), Halliburton (the
vice-president), Bechtel (a nest of mighty
Republicans) and so forth.

All of this is extraordinarily blatant, yet the
American people seem benumbed, unable to read,
think, or remember, and thus fit subjects for a
president who shares their limitations. A grumpy
old Democrat, I observe to my friends that our
emperor is himself the best argument for
intelligent design, the current theocratic
substitute for what used to be called
creationism. Sigmund Freud might be chagrined to
discover that he is forgotten, while the satan of
America is now Charles Darwin. President Bush,
who says that Jesus is his "favourite
philosopher", recently decreed in regard to
intelligent design and evolution: "Both sides
ought to be properly taught."

I am a teacher by profession, about to begin my
51st year at Yale, where frequently my subject is
American writers. Without any particular
competence in politics, I assert no special
insight in regard to the American malaise. But I
am a student of what I have learned to call the
American Religion, which has little in common
with European Christianity. There is now a parody
of the American Jesus, a kind of Republican CEO
who disapproves of taxes, and who has widened the
needle's eye so that camels and the wealthy pass
readily into the Kingdom of Heaven. We have also
an American holy spirit, the comforter of our
burgeoning poor, who don't bother to vote. The
American trinity pragmatically is completed by an
imperial warrior God, trampling with shock and awe.

These days I reread the writers who best define
America: Emerson, Hawthorne, Whitman, Melville,
Mark Twain, Faulkner, among others. Searching
them, I seek to find what could suffice to
explain what seems our national
self-destructiveness. DH Lawrence, in his Studies
in Classic American Literature (1923), wrote what
seems to me still the most illuminating criticism
of Walt Whitman and Herman Melville. Of the two,
Melville provoked no ambivalence in Lawrence. But
Whitman transformed Lawrence's poetry, and
Lawrence himself, from at least 1917 on.
Replacing Thomas Hardy as prime precursor,
Whitman spoke directly to Lawrence's vitalism,
immediacy, and barely evaded homoeroticism. On a
much smaller scale, Whitman earlier had a similar
impact on Gerard Manley Hopkins. Lawrence,
frequently furious at Whitman, as one might be
with an overwhelming father, a King Lear of
poetry, accurately insisted that the Americans
were not worthy of their Whitman. More than ever,
they are not, since the Jacksonian democracy that
both Whitman and Melville celebrated is dying
in our Evening Land.

What defines America? "Democracy" is a ruined
word, because of its misuse in the American
political rhetoric of our moment. If Hamlet and
Don Quixote, between them, define the European
self, then Captain Ahab and "Walt Whitman" (the
persona, not the man) suggest a very different
self from the European. Ahab is Shakespearean,
Miltonic, even Byronic-Shelleyan, but his
monomaniacal quest is his own, and reacts against
the Emersonian self, just as Melville's beloved
Hawthorne recoiled also. Whitman, a more positive
Emersonian, affirms what the Sage of Concord
called self-reliance, the authentic American
religion rather than its Bushian parodies. Though
he possesses a Yale BA and honorary doctorate,
our president is semi-literate at best. He once
boasted of never having read a book through, even
at Yale. Henry James was affronted when he met
President Theodore Roosevelt; what could he have
made of George W Bush?

Having just reread James's The American Scene
(1907), I amuse myself, rather grimly, by
imagining the master of the American novel
touring the United States in 2005, exactly a
century after his return visit to his homeland.
Like TS Eliot in the next generation, James was
far more at home in London than in America, yet
both retained an idiom scarcely English. They
each eventually became British subjects, graced
by the Order of Merit, but Whitman went on
haunting them, more covertly in Eliot's case. The
Waste Land initially was an elegy for Jean
Verdenal, who had been to Eliot what Rupert
Brooke was to Henry James. Whitman's "Lilacs"
elegy for Lincoln became James's favourite poem,
and it deeply contaminates The Waste Land.

I am not suggesting that the American aesthetic
self is necessarily homoerotic: Emerson,
Hawthorne, Mark Twain, Faulkner, Robert Frost
after all are as representative as are Melville,
Whitman and Henry James. Nor does any American
fictive self challenge Hamlet as an ultimate
abyss of inwardness. Yet Emerson bet the American
house (as it were) on self-reliance, which is a
doctrine of solitude. Whitman, as person and as
poetic mask, like his lilacs, bloomed into a
singularity that cared intensely both about the
self and others, but Emersonian consciousness all
too frequently can flower, Hamlet-like, into an
individuality indifferent both to the self and to
others. The United States since Emerson has been
divided between what he called the "party of
hope" and the "party of memory". Our
intellectuals of the left and of the right both
claim Emerson as ancestor.

In 2005, what is self-reliance? I can recognise
three prime stigmata of the American religion:
spiritual freedom is solitude, while the soul's
encounter with the divine (Jesus, the Paraclete,
the Father) is direct and personal, and, most
crucially, what is best and oldest in the
American religionist goes back to a
time-before-time, and so is part or particle of
God. Every second year, the Gallup pollsters
survey religion in the United States, and report
that 93% of us believe in God, while 89% are
certain that God loves him or her on a personal
basis. And 45% of us insist that Earth was
created precisely as described in Genesis and is
only about 9,000 or fewer years old. The actual
figure is 4.5 billion years, and some dinosaur
fossils are dated as 190 million years back.
Perhaps the intelligent designers, led by George
W Bush, will yet give us a dinosaur Gospel,
though I doubt it, as they, and he, dwell within
a bubble that education cannot invade.

Contemporary America is too dangerous to be
laughed away, and I turn to its most powerful
writers in order to see if we remain coherent
enough for imaginative comprehension. Lawrence
was right; Whitman at his very best can sustain
momentary comparison with Dante and Shakespeare.
Most of what follows will be founded on Whitman,
the most American of writers, but first I turn
again to Moby-Dick, the national epic of
self-destructiveness that almost rivals Leaves of
Grass, which is too large and subtle to be judged
in terms of self-preservation or apocalyptic
destructiveness.

Some of my friends and students suggest that Iraq
is President Bush's white whale, but our leader
is absurdly far from Captain Ahab's aesthetic
dignity. The valid analogue is the Pequod; as
Lawrence says: "America! Then such a crew.
Renegades, castaways, cannibals, Ishmael,
Quakers," and South Sea Islanders, Native
Americans, Africans, Parsees, Manxmen, what you
will. One thinks of our tens of thousands of
mercenaries in Iraq, called "security employees"
or "contractors". They mix former American
Special Forces, Gurkhas, Boers, Croatians,
whoever is qualified and available. What they
lack is Captain Ahab, who could give them a
metaphysical dimension.

Ahab carries himself and all his crew (except
Ishmael) to triumphant catastrophe, while
Moby-Dick swims away, being as indestructible as
the Book of Job's Leviathan. The obsessed
captain's motive ostensibly is revenge, since
earlier he was maimed by the white whale, but his
truer desire is to strike through the universe's
mask, in order to prove that while the visible
world might seem to have been formed in love, the
invisible spheres were made in fright. God's
rhetorical question to Job: "Can'st thou draw out
Leviathan with a hook?" is answered by Ahab's:
"I'd strike the sun if it insulted me!" The
driving force of the Bushian-Blairians is greed,
but the undersong of their Iraq adventure is
something closer to Iago's pyromania. Our leader,
and yours, are firebugs.

One rightly expects Whitman to explain our
Evening Land to us, because his imagination is
America's. A Free-Soiler, he opposed the Mexican
war, as Emerson did. Do not our two Iraq
invasions increasingly resemble the Mexican and
Spanish-American conflicts? Donald Rumsfeld
speaks of permanent American bases in Iraq,
presumably to protect oil wells. President Bush's
approval rating was recently down to 38%, but I
fear that this popular reaction has more to do
with the high price of petrol than with any
outrage at our Iraq crusade.

What has happened to the American imagination if
we have become a parody of the Roman empire? I
recall going to bed early on election night in
November 2004, though friends kept phoning with
the hopeful news that there appeared to be some
three million additional voters. Turning the
phone off, I gloomily prophesied that these were
three million Evangelicals, which indeed was the case.

Our politics began to be contaminated by
theocratic zealots with the Reagan revelation,
when southern Baptists, Mormons, Pentecostals,
and Adventists surged into the Republican party.
The alliance between Wall Street and the
Christian right is an old one, but has become
explicit only in the past quarter century. What
was called the counter-culture of the late 1960s
and 70s provoked the reaction of the 80s, which
is ongoing. This is all obvious enough, but
becomes subtler in the context of the religiosity
of the country, which truly divides us into two
nations. Sometimes I find myself wondering if the
south belatedly has won the civil war, more than
a century after its supposed defeat. The leaders
of the Republican party are southern; even the
Bushes, despite their Yale and Connecticut
tradition, were careful to become Texans and
Floridians. Politics, in the United States,
perhaps never again can be separated from
religion. When so many vote against their own
palpable economic interests, and choose "values"
instead, then an American malaise has replaced the
American dream.

Whitman, still undervalued as a poet, in relation
to his astonishing aesthetic power, remains the
permanent prophet of our party of hope. That
seems ironic in many ways, since the crucial
event of Whitman's life was our civil war, in
which a total of 625,000 men were slain, counting
both sides. In Britain, the "great war" is the
first world war, because nearly an entire
generation of young men died. The United States
remains haunted by the civil war, the central
event in the life of the nation since the
Declaration of Independence. David S Reynolds,
the most informed of Whitman's biographers,
usefully demonstrates that Whitman's poetry, from
1855-60, was designed to help hold the Union
together. After the sunset glory of "When Lilacs
Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd", the 1865 elegy
overtly for Abraham Lincoln, and inwardly for
Whitman's poetic self-identity, something burned
out in the bard of Leaves of Grass. Day after
day, for several years, he had exhausted himself,
in the military hospitals of Washington DC,
dressing wounds, reading to, and writing letters
for, the ill and maimed, comforting the dying.
The extraordinary vitalism and immediacy departed
from his poetry. It is as though he had
sacrificed his own imagination on the altar of
those martyred, like Lincoln, in the fused cause
of union and emancipation.

Whitman died in 1892, a time of American politics
as corrupt as this, if a touch less blatant than
the era of Bushian theocracy. But there was a
curious split in the poet of Leaves of Grass,
between what he called the soul, and his "real
me" or "me myself", an entity distinct from his
persona, "Walt Whitman, one of the roughs, an
American":

   "I believe in you my soul, the other I am must
not abase itself to you,
   And you must not be abased to the other."

The rough Walt is the "I" here, and has been
created to mediate between his character or soul,
and his real me or personality. I fear that this
is permanently American, the abyss between
character and personality. Doubtless, this can be
a universal phenomenon: one thinks of Nietzsche
and of WB Yeats. And yet mutual abasement between
soul and self destroys any individual's
coherence. My fellow citizens who vote for
"values", against their own needs, manifest
something of the same dilemma.

As the persona "Walt Whitman" melted away in the
furnace of national affliction in the civil war,
it was replaced by a less capable persona, "the
Good Grey Poet". No moral rebirth kindled postwar
America; instead Whitman witnessed the
extraordinary corruption of President US Grant's
administration, which is the paradigm emulated by
so many Republican presidencies, including what
we suffer at this moment.

Whitman himself became less than coherent in his
long decline, from 1866 to 1892. He did not ice
over, like the later Wordsworth, but his
prophetic stance ebbed away. Lost, he ceased to
be an Emersonian, and rather weirdly attempted to
become a Hegelian! In "The Evening Land", an
extraordinary poem of early 1922, DH Lawrence
anticipated his long-delayed sojourn in America,
which began only in September of that year, when
he reached Taos, New Mexico. He had hoped to
visit the United States in February 1917, but
England denied him a passport. Lawrence's poem is
a kind of Whitmanian love-hymn to America, but is
even more ambivalent than the chapter on Whitman
in Studies in Classic American Literature.

"Are you the grave of our day?" Lawrence asks,
and begs America to cajole his soul, even as he
admits how much he fears the Evening Land:

   "Your more-than-European idealism,
   Like a be-aureoled bleached skeleton hovering
   Its cage-ribs in the social heaven, beneficent."

This rather ghastly vision is not inappropriate
to our moment, nor is Lawrence's bitter conclusion:

   "'These States!' as Whitman said,
   Whatever he meant."

What Whitman meant (as Lawrence knew) was that
the United States itself was to be the greatest
of poems. But with that grand assertion, I find
myself so overwhelmed by an uncomfortable sense
of irony, that I cease these reflections. Shelley
wore a ring, on which was inscribed the motto:
"The good time will come." In September, the US
secretary of state Condoleezza Rice was quoted as
saying at Zion Church in Whistler, Alabama: "The
Lord Jesus Christ is going to come on time if we
just wait."

? Harold Bloom 2005
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