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The Saturday Club책 읽는 즐거움 2018. 6. 15. 01:26
Martin Duberman, James Russell Lowell (1966)
이 책에서 흥미롭게 읽은 것들 중 하나는
James Russell Lowell 이 회원이었던 Saturday Club 이야기다.
(John Wesley 의 'The Holy Club' 을 모델로 했던,
대학 2학년 때의 우리(다섯 명의?) 클럽이 생각난다. L 은
이번 한국 방문에서 만났을 때도 '홀리 클럽' 얘기를 꺼냈었다)
"The Saturday Club had an informal, almost accidental
beginning. To the extent that it had a founding father,
the credit probably goes to Emerson ...
"It was decided to dine together the last Saturday in
every month at the Parker House; there would be no written
rules and no records, a unanimous vote would be required to
elect a new member, the expense of each dinner would be
assessed on those present and guests would be
permitted -- each man paying for his own guests.
"In any case, the spectrum of views in the Saturday Club
was considerable. Though Lowell, Howe, Emerson, Longfellow
and Dana, for example, were all strongly antislavery, they
differed widely as to methods and timetables, ranging
from Longfellow's apolitical stance.
"The range of temperament was also considerable: Hawthorne,
silent, ... Longfellow, gentle, modest, sweet-tempered, remarkably
free of jealousy and spite, ... Homes, that miniature Voltaire,
ebullient, taut, youthfully egotistical, thrusting from his
tiny frame the large intellect and wit.
"Though conversation was almost always good-
natured, full of anecdote, sally, word play, there would be
disagreements of opinion and jostling of personality. Whipple
maintained that the club's very success was due to its being
'a society based on mutual repulsion ... it was ingeniously
supposed that persons who looked on all questions of
science, theology, and literature from different points
of view would be the very person who would most
enjoy one another's company once a month ...'
... Agassiz [the most famous scientist of his day] and
Emerson would contest the merits of Darwin, the scientist
upholding man's special creation, and the transcendentalist
accepting man's common origin with the ape.
"Though the distinction of its membership is sufficient to
account for the club's brilliance, something more is needed
to explain its congeniality.... These men were one in
their assumption that there was an obligation at such
affairs to be not only interesting, but pleasant.
What might be lost in absolute honesty
was gained in geniality....
To reveal private intimacies cheapened the intimacies even
while embarrassing the listeners; to engage in tenacious debate
on public questions ruined what possibilities the occasion
offered for relaxation. In short, casual society should
be neither a confessional nor an arena.
"Social 'artificialities,' however, did not preclude
straightforwardness with intimates, nor even,
sometimes, in public print.
"The separation these men made between the private
and the social helps to explain why they kept
their socializing to a minimum."
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