The Diary of H.L. Mencken.The Dairy of H. L. Mencken The main impression that arises from H. L. Mencken's diaries is of the unlikelihood of their author as the leading American writer of his day. He was a man with no sympathy whatever for the national enterprise; in one typically dolorous entry, he says, "My grandfather, I believe, made a mistake when he came to this country... I have spent all of my 62 years here, but I still find it impossible to fit myself into the accepted patterns of American life and thought. After all these years For the film, see . "After All These Years" is the fifth and final single released by rock band Silverchair from their fourth album, Diorama, which was released in 2002, while "After All These Years" was released in 2003. , I remain a foreigner." He was not a creature of the literary or journalistic demimonde dem·i·monde n. 1. a. A class of women kept by wealthy lovers or protectors. b. Women prostitutes considered as a group. 2. either. His closest friends were solid, prosperous burghers Burghers (bûr`gərz), in the 18th cent., a party of the Secession Church of Scotland, resulting from one of the "breaches" in the history of Presbyterianism. : professors at the Johns Hopkins Noun 1. Johns Hopkins - United States financier and philanthropist who left money to found the university and hospital that bear his name in Baltimore (1795-1873) Hopkins 2. Medical School, executives of the Baltimore Sunpapers, and, in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , the publishers Alfred and Blanche Knopf rather than his fellow writers. His idea of a good time is conveyed by a passage written after the death of his friend Max Brodel, a medical illustrator A medical illustrator is a professional artist who interprets and creates visual material to help record and disseminate medical, biological and related knowledge. Medical illustrators not only produce such material but can also function as consultants and administrators within the and a fellow member of the Saturday Night Saturday Night may refer to: Music
It has been the custom of the club since the beginning to end every evening of music with a waltz, and usually it has been one of Strauss's, though the library also contains many by Waldteufel, Gungl, Komzak and Niehrer. Max always welcomed this postlude post·lude n. 1. Music a. An organ voluntary played at the end of a church service. b. A concluding piece. 2. A final chapter or phase. . "I begin to feel beerish," he would say - and the moment the piano lid banged down we'd be off to the beer table. No members of the club ate and drank more heartily. He was, in fact, a really gargantuan gar·gan·tu·an adj. Of immense size, volume, or capacity; gigantic. See Synonyms at enormous. gargantuan Adjective huge or enormous [after Gargantua, a giant in Rabelais' eater.... Maryland is for crabs Although Mencken was, unlike anyone who's around today, enormously influential as both a political commentator and a literary critic Noun 1. literary critic - a critic of literature critic - a person who is professionally engaged in the analysis and interpretation of works of art , he conveys in the diary no sense of real engagement with either field. For all of his adult life he disapproved of the basic condition of American politics, and the figure he disapproved of most of all was Franklin Roosevelt ("a fraud from snout snout the upper lip and the apex of the nose, especially of the pig. Called also rostrum. Has a specialized skin to survive the rigors of rooting, is supported by a separate bone (the os rostri), and also has a few sensory hairs. to tail"); to the extent that he found any politicians tolerable, they were conservative Republicans like Robert Taft and Joseph Ritchie Doctor Joseph Ritchie (c 1788 - November 20, 1819) was an English surgeon, explorer and naturalist. In 1818 Ritchie was sent with George Francis Lyon by Sir John Barrow to find the course of the River Niger and the location of Timbuktu. , the governor of Maryland The Governor of Maryland heads the executive branch of the government of the U.S. state of Maryland and is commander-in-chief of the state's military forces. He or she is the highest ranking official in the state, and has a broad range of appointive powers in state and local , whose following among intellectuals was probably limited to Mencken. In the final phase of his career, the only political cause that truly interested him - opposition to American involvement in World War II - was one he felt (probably rightly) that he couldn't get away with writing about, so the particulars of his views about it remain a mystery. Anyway, it's hard to imagine that if he had set down his case against the war, it would seem anything but embarrassingly wrongheaded today. There is not a hint in the diary that Mencken perceived Adolf Hitler as either dangerous or evil. In general, very oddly for a journalist, Mencken had no interest in the idea of the nobility of a writer's participation in public life. In one entry he says proudly about his writing, "It is free of moral purpose"; in another, "The one obligation I recognize in this world is my duty to my immediate family." Burgher burgh·er n. 1. A citizen of a town or borough. 2. A comfortable or complacent member of the middle class. 3. a. A member of the mercantile class of a medieval European city. b. king During the years before 1930, when the diary begins, Mencken championed the work of many of the great writers of his day, such as Eugene O'Neill, Theodore Dreiser, Sinclair Lewis, Willa Cather, and Scott Fitzgerald. By the time of the diary, though, Mencken had stopped writing literary criticism, and almost all of the literary commentary in the diary has to do with how pathetic his writer-friends (including all of the above and, especially, the now long-forgotten Joseph Hergesheimer Joseph Hergesheimer (February 15, 1880 – April 25, 1954) was a prominent American writer of the early 20th century known for his naturalistic novels of decadent life amongst the very wealthy. ) had become, thanks to alcoholism, financial imprudence im·pru·dence n. 1. The quality or condition of being unwise or indiscreet. 2. An unwise or indiscreet act. Noun 1. , and physical infirmity Flaw, defect, or weakness. In a legal sense, the term infirmity is used to mean any imperfection that renders a particular transaction void or incomplete. For example, if a deed drawn up to transfer ownership of land contains an erroneous description of it, an . He doesn't seem to be reading new books; there is only one entry in which he praises other writers' work, and even in that case he is quick to denigrate den·i·grate tr.v. den·i·grat·ed, den·i·grat·ing, den·i·grates 1. To attack the character or reputation of; speak ill of; defame. 2. the authors of the two books he admires: Will Durant Noun 1. Will Durant - United States historian (1885-1981) Durant, William James Durant (Caesar and Christ) for being "only a popularizer pop·u·lar·ize tr.v. pop·u·lar·ized, pop·u·lar·iz·ing, pop·u·lar·iz·es 1. To make popular: A famous dancer popularized the new hairstyle. 2. , and full of unwarranted pretensions," and John Gunther (Inside Asia) for being "in general... a third-rater." A typical willfully willfully adv. referring to doing something intentionally, purposefully and stubbornly. Examples: "He drove the car willfully into the crowd on the sidewalk." "She willfully left the dangerous substances on the property." (See: willful) nonliterary passage on another writer is this account of a meeting with T.S. Eliot: An amiable fellow, but with little to say. He told me that his father was a brick manufacturer in Missouri. No talk of religion. We discussed magazine prices. He charged 7/6 a copy for the Criterion. He believes that J.C. Squire's effort to increase the circulation of the London Mercury by reducing its price from 2/6 to 1s. a copy has been a failure. I drank a quart of home-brew beer, and Eliot got down two scotches. A dull evening. The diary's much-discussed anti-semitism, rather than seeming out of character, is entirely of a piece with its picture of Mencken as an anti-New Deal conservative lunching comfortably at the Maryland Club. There are two broad varieties of anti-semitism: the kind animated by the idea that there is a Jewish conspiracy to ruin the world, and the country-club kind, in which Jews are seen as "pushy push·y adj. push·i·er, push·i·est Disagreeably aggressive or forward. push i·ly adv. " and otherwise socially distasteful. Mencken subscribed to the latter view, as no doubt did most of his friends. The apparent paradox of his many business and social associations with Jews can be explained in part by pointing out that most of his Jewish friends were of German rather than Eastern European origin and probably shared some of his distaste for the Jewish immigrants of the 1880-1920 period. For example, he reported that Alfred Knopf (who was Jewish) was considering moving his publishing company from Manhattan to the suburbs because "He realizes himself that there are now too many Jews in his office. Once he gets to Westchester County he should be able to find supplies of labor of a more desirable sort." If Mencken was not, attitudinally, an ordinary querulous old Republican, there is nothing in the diary to prove it. The one government agency for which he had kind words was the Navy, because of its gentlemanly cast. He was dead set against all aspects of modernity: sound in motion pictures, automobiles, labor unions, air conditioning, airplanes, bureaucracy, psychology, radio, television. He was convinced that the world was getting steadily worse in every way, and he made no exception to the rule for himself. He was profoundly hypochondriacal hy·po·chon·dri·ac n. A person affected with hypochondria. adj. 1. Relating to or affected with hypochondria. 2. Anatomy Relating to or located in the hypochondrium. , and pleased that he had fathered no children who might have to endure the horrors of the future. The three institutions he cared about most - the Sunpapers, the Hopkins medical school, and the Knopf publishing house - were all, to his mind, in a state of alarming decline. The one blessing of the stroke that tragically ended his ability to work in 1948 was that it may have partially shielded him from postwar America, which he surely would have despised even more than the periods he was able to write about. A writer's writer Why, then, was (and is) Mencken so much admired by other writers? Walter Lippmann called him "the most powerful personal influence on this whole generation of educated people." Edmund Wilson harbored some doubts about Mencken but wrote him admiring letters even during his communist phase in the thirties. The diary has been much defended this year. What is the source of his appeal? Mencken was extremely dedicated to his craft, and, unlike all the contemporaries he disapproved of, he makes a good role model of literary constancy con·stan·cy n. 1. Steadfastness, as in purpose or affection; faithfulness. 2. The condition or quality of being constant; changelessness. Noun 1. . He had a Germanic devotion to arbeit, as well as to music and beer. In his prime, he wrote 14 hours a day, 6 days a week. Even in his mid-sixties he turned out a book a year. Near his 65th birthday, he wrote, "Looking back over a life of hard work, I find that my only regret is that I didn't work even harder." He was entirely indifferent to money and fame, those corrupters of so many American writers, and absolutely untouched by the desire to curry favor to seek to gain favor by flattery or attentions. See Favor, n. os> to seek to gain favor by flattery, caresses, kindness, or officious civilities. See also: Curry favor through his writing. He was so self-motivated that he turned out a memoir of his early career more than 3,000 typed pages long that he had no intention of publishing because it was even more frank than the three volumes of memoirs he did publish. The prose style of the diary, initially off-putting because it is so plain compared to that of his work for publication, is winning in the long run because it is so consistently impeccable and graceful; in fact, the diaries might make a better stylistic monument than his bombastic essays, which, read today, carry a hint of the artificial voice of a 19th-century medicine-show barker. Personally, Mencken was a man of great decency. The diary records the maintenance of many friendships, some of them dating back to earliest boyhood; most of the entries mention a lengthy "gabble" or "palaver" with this or that old-timer. He lived modestly in the house where he grew up. He did many favors for people who were in no position to repay them. He regularly visited an old uncle in a rest home, and offered to pay for his care. He answered thousands of letters from people he didn't know, usually on the day he received them. He was adamantly and admirably rooted in his hometown of Baltimore. He was an uxorious ux·o·ri·ous adj. Excessively submissive or devoted to one's wife. [From Latin ux rius, from uxor, wife. husband. But these virtues cannot by themselves account for the magnitude of Mencken's reputation. Part of the rest of the explanation is that he helped to invent the concept of the independent intellectual in this country. Before Mencken, most leading critics of American life and letters were stuffy academics; Mencken himself, self-taught, self-employed, entertaining, and popular, demonstrated to younger writers like Wilson that they need not become professors. The heyday of the American intellectual, which ran roughly from World War I through the 1960s (when intellectual life outside the universities began to disappear again), was at least arguably ushered in by Mencken. Eggheads and yokels It is impossible, though, to dismiss the suspicion that there is a darker side to the cult of Mencken - that the real common ground between him and the intellectuals was an antidemocratic spirit. It is no secret that Mencken disliked democracy. One of his books, Notes on Democracy, makes his feelings about it perfectly clear, and in many other published works he makes no effort to disguise his preference for a pre-capitalist aristocracy as the ideal form of social and governmental authority. The fundamental reason for this conviction was that Mencken considered the great mass of people to be inherently inferior; any society controlled by them was bound to be second-rate, and there was no better example than the United States. Mencken was full of ethnic prejudices - it's surprising that the anti-semitism of the diary made news, because his oeuvre is full of anti-semitic statements; in 1922 he characterized the pogrom-fleeing immigrants from Eastern Europe as "Jews too incompetent to swindle swindle v. to cheat through trick, device, false statements or other fraudulent methods with the intent to acquire money or property from another to which the swindler is not entitled. Swindling is a crime as one form of theft. (See: fraud, theft) even the barbarous peasants of Russia, Poland, and Rumania" - but he also despised ordinary native-born Americans. By far the most vituperative passages in the diary are directed at the general run of "yokels," "boobs," "morons," and "imbeciles," and, in particular, at the migrants from Appalachia to Baltimore Mencken charmingly referred to as "lintheads," "anthropoids," or "vermin vermin /ver·min/ (ver´min) 1. an external animal parasite. 2. such parasites collectively.ver´minous ver·min n. pl. ." When FDR died, Mencken noted the occasion in his diary by saying, "He was the first American to penetrate to the real depths of vulgar stupidity. He never made the mistake of overestimating the intelligence of the American mob." It is difficult to see what principled defense there would be today for Mencken's core beliefs; indeed, the political triumph of conservatism in the 1980s was based on its shedding its elitist e·lit·ism or é·lit·ism n. 1. The belief that certain persons or members of certain classes or groups deserve favored treatment by virtue of their perceived superiority, as in intellect, social status, or financial resources. tradition and embracing populism populism Political program or movement that champions the common person, usually by favourable contrast with an elite. Populism usually combines elements of the left and right, opposing large business and financial interests but also frequently being hostile to established . (The chief contemporary organ of Mencken-worship, The American Spectator, doesn't have the nerve to engage in true Menckenism, which would surely today include a hatred of Ronald Reagan, who is exactly the kind of hearty, positive-thinking, nonintellectual public figure that Mencken most disliked.) As a general principle, democracy has had a pretty good run over the past half-century; it would be impossible to claim that it had been discredited in any way. Hitler, among others, made it permanently impossible for ethnic put-downs to seem lighthearted and funny, as they must have in Mencken's heyday. Intellectually, Mencken belonged to a tradition of complete uninterest un·in·ter·est n. Lack of interest or concern; indifference. in common people (his idol was Friedrich Nietzsche, and he considered Don Quixote "almost unreadable") that seems to have come to a dead end. What is easy to see, however, is how neatly Mencken's writing during his great decade, the twenties, fit into the belief-system of most American intellectuals, even though they were miles to the left of Mencken politically. Mencken had three great gripes gripe v. griped, grip·ing, gripes v.intr. 1. Informal To complain naggingly or petulantly; grumble. 2. To have sharp pains in the bowels. v.tr. 1. then, all of which most intellectuals would have heartily agreed with: American involvement in World War I, Prohibition, and the booster culture that produced President Warren G. Harding
Warren Gamaliel Harding (November 2 1865 – August 2 1923) was an American politician and the 29th President of the United States, from 1921 . In all three cases, it is possible to see the real source of Mencken's views as simply his primary loyalty to Germany and German culture - that would explain his feelings about the World War I (and World War II, for that matter), the civilizing effects of liquor, and the anti-intellectualism of American life. Most other intellectuals didn't share Mencken's feelings about Germany, but they identified the war, Prohibition, and Harding with the dominance of a bland, conservative, business-oriented ethos from which they felt excluded. All of the books that formed the foundation of the intellectual "opposition culture" - Randolph Bourne's War and the Intellectuals (the war was a munitions-industry plot), Harold Stearns's Civilization in America (there isn't any), and Sinclair Lewis's Babbit (businessmen are idiots) were entirely consistent with Menckenism. Mencken's relative silence on political matters after 1930 helped obscure how far apart he and most other intellectuals really were. Snob story Specific issues aside, Mencken's antidemocratic beliefs were always hard to miss, but antidemocracy has always been the secret vice of the intellectuals. As far back as the 1840s, Washington Irving was explaining his expatriation to England by saying that, while America had "the sublime and beautiful of natural scenery," only Europe possessed "the refinements of highly cultivated society." By the 1920s, by intellectuals' lights, this country had lost its sublimeness, but remained a howling wilderness as far as culture was concerned. In Western Europe, scholars and artists were godlike god·like adj. Resembling or of the nature of a god or God; divine. god like figures, celebrated by their whole societies; in America, they were outcasts. The national tone seemed to have been set by the Elks Club. Mencken's diatribes against the numbing flood of nationalistic PR were received by other writers as courageous and thrilling. His pummeling of the unappreciative masses was obviously also pleasing to intellectuals - and it still is. Just a couple of months ago, an A-list of American writers (Auchincloss, Ellison, Galbraith, Hersey, Mailer, Miller Schlesinger, Styron, Vonnegut) defended the Mencken diary in a letter to The New York Review of Books by pointing out that in addition to being anti-semitic and anti-black, "It also contains discourteous remarks about most races, nationalities, and professions; in fact, Mencken's harshest words are directed at `the only pure Anglo-Saxons left in the United States . . . a wretchedly dirty, shiftless shift·less adj. 1. a. Lacking ambition or purpose; lazy: a shiftless student. b. Characterized by a lack of ambition or energy: studied in a shiftless way. , stupid, and rascally ras·cal n. 1. One that is playfully mischievous. 2. An unscrupulous, dishonest person; a scoundrel. adj. Archaic Made up of, belonging to, or relating to the common people: people.'" It's amazing that at this late date intellectuals are willing to renounce racism but not snobbery, which is their hidden link to Mencken; but that is where we still are. To put the best face on it, American intellectuals' misgivings about the American people might turn out to be an artifact - one of the last remaining - of our country's youth. Historically, snobbery was a way for American writers to establish their bona fides with their superiors in Europe, by demonstrating that they shared the European conviction that the United States was uncivilized. Even in the twenties, Mencken was able, without fear of appearing ridiculous, to portray this country as being clearly a province of Europe in such areas as science, medicine, painting, law, literature, criticism, philosophy, music, diplomacy, politics, and finance: "Everything American is a bit amateurish and childish . . . . The most conspicuous and respected American in nearly every field of endeavor, saving only the purely commercial . . . is a man who would attract little attention in any other country." For intellectuals who felt ashamed about this state of affairs, the booboisie boob·oi·sie n. A class of people regarded as stupid and gullible. [boob1 + (bourge)oisie.] Noun 1. served as a kind of excuse, as well as a justification for feelings of superiority. But now this country has been a leader in all the fields Mencken mentioned for at least a generation, so the need for an excuse no longer exists. One of the ironies of the American cultural ascent, when it's considered in the light of Mencken's writing, is that it was accomplished in large part precisely because we aren't the kind of aristocratic society he liked. Relatively few of the people who have led this country to cultural leadership emerged from the privileged classes. Mencken himself, who never went to college and who rose to prominence on the basis of his appeal to a popular audience, probably would not have become a great figure if his family had remained in Germany, as he wished. Now that American intellectuals no longer need an explanation for their country's cultural shortcomings A shortcoming is a character flaw. Shortcomings may also be:
tr.v. re·ex·am·ined, re·ex·am·in·ing, re·ex·am·ines 1. To examine again or anew; review. 2. Law To question (a witness) again after cross-examination. of our national purpose. It's time for them finally to come to terms with the life of the country. Mencken fans might argue that a dose of the old man's medicine is needed now more than ever, because a wave of obnoxious self-satisfaction always follows the winning of a war, even a cold one. They'd be only half right: that danger exists, but it can be headed off without resorting to booboisie-bashing. There is a long and noble tradition in this country of comically deflating official pomposities and pieties without at the same time condemning most Americans as fools. Mark Twain did it in Huckleberry huckleberry, any plant of the genus Gaylussacia, shrubs of the family Ericaceae (heath family), native to North and South America. The box huckleberry (G. brachycera) of E North America is evergreen and is often cultivated. The common huckleberry (G. Finn, and so did the frontier humorists A humorist is a person who writes or performs humorous material. The material written and/or performed by humorists tends to be more subtle and cerebral than the material created by stand-up comedians and comedy writers. who were his precursors. More recently, the movies and television provide a wealth of examples, from the Marx Brothers to the very funny and subversive new prime-time cartoon show, "The Simpsons." Intellectuals now could play an important part in redirecting the country's concern to problems like economic stagnation and ghetto poverty, on whose solution the future of the United States rests. Were Mencken alive today, he would point out that the creed that has swept over the world is nothing more than a mass desire to eat McDonald's hamburgers at shopping malls. In that sense he provides a wonderful guidepost for intellectuals: Think of what he would say, let it crystallize crys·tal·lize also crys·tal·ize v. crys·tal·lized also crys·tal·ized, crys·tal·liz·ing also crys·tal·iz·ing, crys·tal·liz·es also crys·tal·iz·es v.tr. 1. in your mind, and then be sure not to say it yourself. Nicholas Lemann, a contributing editor of The Washington Monthly, is a national correspondent of The Atlantic. |
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i·ly adv.
rius, from uxor, wife.
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