On Essays and Letters
The Bach Moment
by James V. Schall, S. J.
Recently, I wandered into Barnes & Noble on M Street
in Georgetown intending to purchase the new Compendium
of Catholic Social Doctrine. They did not have it. To
save money, if that is the purpose of life, I should have
left at that moment. On the new releases shelf, however,
for only eleven dollars, was J. M. Coetzee’s Disgrace,
a novel I had heard of and vaguely wanted to read. Thinking
I could get it later, I proceeded to the upper floors where
I found John Paul II’s second from last book, Memory
and Identity, which I did purchase, a remarkable
book. But in the process of looking, I came across Coetzee’s Stranger
Shores: Literary Essays. Though I am generally a
sucker for these sorts of books, what immediately prompted
me to buy it was the first essay in the collection, “What
Is a Classic: A Lecture.”
I will have to maintain that a lecture can become an essay
when written down. In any case, the lecture was originally
given in Graz, Austria, in 1991. I took the book home and
read the essay right away.
Coetzee’s own South African background serves to provide
the framework for this consideration on the famous question
about the nature and character of a classic, be it in literature,
music, or even games. Coetzee, now at the University of Chicago,
begins his considerations by recalling T. S. Eliot’s
famous essay, What Is a Classic, a lecture given
to the Virgil Society in London in October, 1944. Coetzee
notes that Eliot barely mentioned the war in his lecture,
as if to say, as C. S. Lewis said in his famous essay Learning
in War Time, that there are more important things than
wars, even during wars, the chief of which are precisely
classics, that is, reflections on beauty, truth, and what
is. Without these, no one can know what he is fighting for.
Coetzee’s problem in this lecture/essay is to define
what a classic is. He is not comfortable with the idea that
a classic has no history. He points out that many classics
are not recognized as classics until many decades or centuries
after they are written. The burden of his lecture is to see
if the history of a classic’s becoming a classic might
itself be a factor in discovering what a classic is. Coetzee
is not a debunker, though he takes some pains to examine
Eliot’s own relation between his American background
and his British and London literary and personal identity,
wherein he (Eliot) could better associate himself with the
great western classical tradition, particularly with Virgil.
But what interested me most about this essay was Coetzee’s
description of how he arrived at the problem of what is a
classic in the first place. It seems that Coetzee was a boy
of fifteen, living in the suburbs of Cape Town in 1955. He
was, as are many boys of his age, bored out of his mind,
as he tells us, the main problem of existence in those days.
Nothing much was going on. It was a Sunday afternoon (I think
of Johnny Cash’s ballad Sunday Morning Coming Down).
Young Coetzee had no reason that day to think that anything
much would go on either.
However, suddenly, from the house next door, Coetzee tells
us that he heard some music that he had never heard of before.
He was not at the time at all musically inclined, and still
the music suddenly made him alert. This is how he describes
the moment:
As long as the music lasted, I was frozen. I dared not
breathe. I was being spoken to by the music as music had
never spoken to me before.
His neighbors seem to have been transient students. He never
heard the piece again though he listened for it. The music
was Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier played on
a harpsichord, though he did not learn this title until later. “At
the age of fifteen, I knew (it) only—in a somewhat
suspicions and even hostile teenage manner—as ‘classical
music.’ ”
It was from this experience that Coetzee later investigated
Bach as a classic, only to find out that Bach was not especially
recognized in his own time, and when he was later appreciated
it was often for other reasons than his music—romanticism
or German nationalism. Yet, it seems that there was always
a tradition among musicians of playing and re-playing Bach.
Indeed, music seems to have this requirement built into its
very core, so that what is a classic is examined again and
again down the ages.
Later in life, Coetzee examined himself often on this initial
experience. Was he moved simply because that is what classics
do to us if we read or hear them? Yet, all of us know people
who listen to or read classics who are not moved by them
at all.
About my response to Bach in 1955, I asked whether it
was truly a response to some inherent quality in the music
rather than a symbolic election on my part of European
high culture as a way out of a social and historical dead
end.
Thus, our love of Bach could be a sort of snobbishness.
In the end, Coetzee thinks that it really was the music.
But the very history of classics, the critique of them even,
is part of what makes them classics. The interrogation of
the classic, no matter how hostile, is part of the history
of the classic, inevitable and even to be welcomed.
Yet, what interested me most in Coetzee’s essay/lecture
was not so much his social science ruminations. It was the
raw fact that a human being, even at fifteen—there
are people who have fallen in love in every proper sense
at more or less that age, I think of Dante—can see
or hear something that simply changes his life and, perhaps,
in changing his life, changes the world.
This Bach moment, as I now like to call it, reminds me of
nothing so much as the memorable passage in The Confessions where,
at nineteen, in an obscure also African city, Augustine chanced
to read a dialogue of Cicero. Cicero was another man who
knew about and wondered about what is a classic.
On putting the essay down, the young Augustine burned in
his heart and wanted to become a philosopher, even though
Plato said that nineteen is too young to be one. Moments
that change lives and the world are like these experiences
of two young African gentlemen who read or hear something
that they never heard of, and are frozen by them.
In
conclusion, there is one other young man whom I like to recall,
a young man who, at a similar moment, did not listen. This
is the Rich Young Man in the Gospels (Matthew 16: 19-22)
about whom John Paul II, both in Veritatis Splendor and Memory
and Identity, speaks with great earnestness. This young
man wanted to know what he had to do to be perfect—a
brave question indeed. He was told simply to keep the commandments.
That he had no problem in doing. He is next told that if
he really wanted to be perfect, he should go, sell what he
has, give it to the poor, and follow the man discoursing
with him. We are told the young man was rich.
At this defining moment in his life, unlike the men in Cape
Town or in Tegaste, he rejected the call. He went away sad.
We never hear of him again. This too is a classic scene,
not perhaps of what is truly noble, but of what we are, people
who can be presented with the highest things and not hear
them, not see them, not understand them, or, more likely,
not choose them.
Coetzee tells us, somewhat condescendingly perhaps, that ‘What
Is a Classic?’ was not one of Eliot’s best pieces
of criticism. Yet, when I read Coetzee’s essay/lecture
from Graz, what most struck me about it was his depiction
of T. S. Eliot lecturing in London, while bombs were falling,
and complaining only that, under such unpleasant circumstances,
it was difficult to get the books needed to prepare the said
lecture. Somehow, I do think that that wartime moment was,
in its own way, as riveting as Bach’s clavichord. I
do not mean that to lessen the impact of a Bach or a Cicero
either on Coetzee or myself. I simply want to recall moments
that, in a brief instant, define the highest things and our
response to them.
Whenever I put down the book containing Augustine’s
desiring to be a philosopher, I know that moment changed
the world. From now on, when I hear the Well-Tempered
Clavier, I shall think of this fifteen year old in Cape
Town frozen outside of himself. Whenever I think of Eliot
lecturing to the Virgil Society in London in 1944, not about
the war raging about him, but about the classics, what they
are, I shall know moments that are, yes, themselves classic.
In the end, I shall hope, unlike the Rich Young Man, that,
having seen, heard, and been called to these things that
take us to the heart of what is, I shall not go away sad.
James V. Schall, S.J., is
professor of government at Georgetown University.