home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT1635>
- <title>
- July 22, 1991: An American Optimist
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 22, 1991 The Colorado
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 68
- An American Optimist
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Pico Iyer
- </p>
- <p> All across the world, America is still regarded as the
- home of optimism. But nations, no less than individuals, are
- often negligent of their blessings. This year marks the
- centenary of one of the republic's most bountiful and boundless
- founts of optimism; yet the occasion is more likely to be marked
- abroad than in the U.S. Henry Miller--his middle name was
- Valentine--was born the day after Christmas, 100 years ago,
- and spent the next 88 years as a professional enthusiast, making
- a living out of pleasure and a music out of saying yes. Where
- an Old World master, like the peerless Graham Greene, could
- write elegant circles around doubt, hedging belief in with a
- knot of moral ironies, Miller just went straight to faith. From
- the first page of his first book, Tropic of Cancer--"I have
- no money, no resources, no hopes. I am the happiest man alive"--through 50-odd books about finding ecstasy in squalor, he
- simply sang of life and love as if the two were interchangeable.
- His guiding star was Rabelais's "For all your ills I give you
- laughter."
- </p>
- <p> When Miller was growing up, the genteel tradition was in
- its prime: so much of America was so captive to European
- proprieties that it might have seemed the Revolution had been
- fought in vain. A writer like Henry James, for example, in
- transporting a nuanced country-house sensibility to England,
- was, almost literally, carrying coals to Newcastle; Miller, by
- contrast, brought to Europe things it was less accustomed to
- seeing: naked appetite, hopeless high spirits, French spoken
- with a Brooklyn accent. And what he brought back was something
- even richer: the great French passions--of love and talk and
- food--translated into a rough Anglo-Saxon vernacular. Joie de
- vivre made American.
- </p>
- <p> For however much he tried to school himself in foreign
- masters of despair--Mishima, say, or Celine--Miller could
- not help remaining a fearlessly joyous soul, "100% American,"
- as he put it, right down to his repudiation of America. No one
- ever embraced life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness more
- lustily. An Emersonic boom was his, and Whitmanic energy. Like
- Emerson, he saw the Greek roots in enthusiasm--the word means
- divine possession--and knew that the poet "speaks adequately
- only when he speaks somewhat wildly...Not with intellect
- alone, but with intellect inebriated by nectar." And like
- Whitman, his fellow rhapsodist of Brooklyn, he sang only of
- himself--in that great American form, the comic-romantic
- monologue--but found in the self everything he needed: "If we
- have not found heaven within, it is a certainty we will not find
- it without." Celebration, not cerebration, was his thing: even
- in old age he was young enough to set about listing all the
- books he'd ever enjoyed, to fill his pages with reminiscences
- of his friends, to dash off 1,500 letters to a starlet named
- Brenda Venus (with whom, just before his death, he enjoyed an
- unlikely but passionate friendship). And even when inspiration
- failed him, Miller simply kept writing and writing till he broke
- into epiphany. No one who ever wrote so badly wrote so well.
- </p>
- <p> But more than his art it was his life, the only subject of
- his art, that served to inspire millions. By now it is easy to
- forget how many of our myths of youth were all but patented, or
- lived out most wholeheartedly, by Miller. The college dropout
- devouring dictionaries while working as a messenger for Western
- Union. The would-be writer heading off to Paris with $10 in his
- pocket. The self-anointed artist collecting his mail at American
- Express, while living off his crooked smile. The underground man
- going back to nature and living, in his 50s, without telephone
- or electricity. The prophet unhonored in his home whose Tropic
- of Cancer was a cult classic in Europe but, true to the
- martyr-artist mystique, had to wait 30 years, until 1961, to
- make it past the censors of America. Carloads of Europeans still
- make the ritual pilgrimage to the Henry Miller Memorial Library
- in Big Sur, Calif. There they can find his legacy all over: in
- the QUESTION AUTHORITY bumper sticker on the van in which a
- wandering Englishman sleeps beside the road; in the HOW TO BE
- AN ARTIST poster on sale on the front porch; in the young man
- practicing his juggling on a sunlit lawn amid the redwoods.
- </p>
- <p> Miller was so spendthrift with himself, and so loud in
- praise of folly, that he laid himself open to every charge. Yet
- to return to his books is to find him much more shaded than the
- goatish orgiast of stereotype. Those who would brand him an
- irresponsible apostle of hedonism must explain why he grew so
- censorious when it came to drugs. Those who would call him a
- male chauvinist pig must account for his fervent championing of
- Gloria Steinem and Germaine Greer. Those who would write him off
- as a pornographer must tell us why he spoke out against the
- sexual revolution (in which he found more signs of jadedness
- than love). Even his ardent worshiper Anais Nin confessed some
- disappointment that he kept so clean and "monastic" a home.
- Besides, the one person who called him "monstrous" was himself.
- </p>
- <p> For many Americans, Henry Miller is still a slightly
- embarrassing presence, the unruly bumptious country cousin who
- makes a display of himself at the dinner table. At the age of
- 69, he had not yet seen his first book published in his
- homeland. And even now, 11 years after his death, he remains a
- tireless troublemaker (the movie about his love affair with Nin,
- Henry & June, prompted a new kind of X rating). Yet all this is
- precisely what endears him to the visitors. It is why he is the
- envy of many an Old World sophisticate (George Orwell called him
- "the only imaginative prose writer of the slightest value who
- has appeared among the English-speaking races for some years
- past"). And it is also why the perennial schoolboy from the
- streets of Brooklyn--a New World Rabelais--is still, 100
- years on, one of the great American exports, unlikely to be
- eclipsed even by the Japanese.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-