I watched George W. Bush’s final State of the Union address
in the winter of 2008 with a sort of blistering rage and worry about the state
of the world. I don’t remember, now, what the seed of the trouble was—maybe
Iraq, maybe climate change, maybe the sort of dread about nothing in particular
and everything all at once that overwhelms me when the world seems to be
floundering and slipping away from the all things bright and beautiful and
fair. I felt, deeply, a sense of wrongness in the world that I was powerless to
combat. When I think of then, of myself at that particular time of
life—twenty-five, and maybe too old too be so adolescently dramatic and naïve—I
imagine my fingers to be more like dry wooden twigs than flesh and blood,
grasping at a world in winter.
Regardless, watching someone I believed then to be
criminally idiotic speak about my country, I was crying and sputtering with
rage. The friend I was watching the speech with got up, walked across the room
to the bookshelf, and tossed a small white book at me. “There,” he said. “Read
that and you’ll be fine.”
It was John Berger’s Hold Everything Dear: Dispatches on
Survival and Resistance. I read it, and the
world as I knew it, changed. I liked the quiet crackling of Berger’s rage, that
he wrote of how the cramped crook of a boy’s body shooting marbles in a
Palestinian settlement spoke of an undefeated despair and familiarity with
unkindly small spaces. I liked the image of an old couple, crossing a
check-point, holding hands no matter the age—a conspiracy of two against the
world. I loved Gareth Evan’s poem at the start—where “the brick of the
afternoon stores the rose heat for the journey.”
I fell for the way of seeing the world that came through
Berger’s words—here was love and fury and a seething peace within it all. The
dead were among the living, and living smelled of the gasoline of motorbikes as
much as the freshness of hay. The despair had grace and teeth, the ghosts had
blood and bones. My own writing, when I’m reading Berger, is more bodily—I
leave muscle and heart and bones and teeth and hands and skin and hair and
blood on the page to a degree I’ve never come to from anyone else. His writing
makes me aware that I am alive, mortal and physical, while tattooing an
eternal, earth-bound mysticism and immediate humanitarian outrage into my
being. The blinders are off, the gloves are off, and any shred of artifice
joins them—butchered and beautiful—on the floor.
After Hold Everything Dear, I devoured everything that I could borrow from my friend, find in
libraries, or otherwise get my hands on. I love, particularly, the Into
Their Labours trilogy and To the
Wedding. Into Their Labours are loosely connected stories about three
generations in a small village in France, but the story, I think, is the same
as small-town anywhere. The binding love, the sense of place, the dirt and
reality rather than a sanitized Euro Disney history—this is the world I believe
to be real. Each one of those stories opened something within my heart and
worldview a little more, made me believe in the stubborn strength of humanity
to lurch forward. When I didn’t like the ending of the trilogy, when I cried at
how the heirs of a pastoral village end in the slums of a nameless city—this
colors how I see the present world’s migrations and crowdings and inequities.
Berger’s writing, gently and ferociously, reminds me who we are, and who we may
be.
The same in To the Wedding, where the wedding reads like some frothy fantasy of a quaint
village—except for the politics that almost keep a father out of the country
and the disease that stalks the bride. To have harsh reality and fairy tale
idealism holding hands on the page…this burnt something about tradition and
mystery into my being that no church service or religion could ever have done.
I’ve sobbed in public while reading several of his books—And
Our Faces, My Heart, Brief as Photos while
sitting on the bench outside an underwear outlet, Here is Where We
Meet while sitting in a shack at my job as
a ski patroller, most memorably. Arguably, I’m hysterical and dramatic and like
to draw attention to my literary loves. It’s partly true. I’m operatic in my
reactions to what I love. I cry, sometimes a lot. Because I’ve found that
Berger’s writing touches something like my bones, the reaction seems authentic.
I’ve checked myself, many times, to make sure that I’m not in love with the
idea of someone moved to tears by words on a page. I don’t think I am. The
emotional reaction slows me back down to the pace where I can absorb the weight
of the words, of the world as Berger points it out. Beautiful words that renew
my faith in the world also change the beat of my heart and the timbre of my
breath. It makes me wonder just how razor thin that faith must be if each
renewal tingles my spine.
With Berger, I know I’m not alone in this breathless wonder.
When I worked at a school library, the drama teacher and I found that we both
love To the Wedding and stood in the
hallway beaming and almost teary-eyed, each putting a palm over our own hearts and
gesturing at the air with the other hand while jointly saying, again and again,
“It’s just…”
Out of the last nine years that I’ve known about John
Berger, I have feathered my bookshelves with copies of most everything of he’s
written. Often, I check the “B” section of a bookstore first—not that I’m necessarily looking
to buy more of his books, but I like to see them there. It’s my iteration of a
rosary or a station of the cross, I suppose. My Berger collection is separated
from most of my books, surrounded by the poetry and the other books that mean
the world to me.
Yet, I thought today, about how long it has been since I’ve
read any of the books. Certainly I still carry them around like totems—I spent
this last summer with an abbreviated book collection and am sure at least Hold
Everything Dear was saved out from storage.
But I haven’t read them, any of them, for at least a few years. The poem I
wrote in response to Hold Everything Dear fell out of my copy, dated January 30, 2008, along with a letter from
my original Berger librarian, sent to my first Montana address that September. I know I’ve
read the book since then, but can’t think when.
All the same, I was shaken to hear that Berger passed away
yesterday. He was ninety, I never met him, he did not write back when I tried
to write him a letter once, and he is not mine, personally, to mourn. Grief, I
believe, is for those who knew him as the man, rather than those who knew him
as the Writer. Nevertheless, I’ve been stumbling on something between gratitude
and grief about his passing. I met Berger, as it were, when the world seemed
dark with a government I did not like or trust. My worries and sadness about
the world going forward now, rather than nearly nine years ago, have suddenly
deepened. Between refugees and ISIS and Russian hacking and climate change and a
President-Elect with climate deniers and white supremacists as confidants and
advisors, I keep coming to the sense that the dark side is winning.
Lazily, selfishly, I wanted Berger and more like him to see
me through this patch of history. I wanted his older world gravitas and someone
who stole art supplies and made love to a woman he called Oslo (because it
rhymed with First Snow) in the London Blitz to light the way for me through
this modern mess.
But then I return to why I haven’t read Berger in a few
years: I haven’t needed to. I used to need to, like needing a bandage over a
wound, like an invalid heals in stages. I needed both the healing and then the
proud badge of the scar. There are no scientific realities—other than death,
digestion, decomposition, and the trading forms of released molecules—where fur
and feathers become flesh, where flesh becomes bone. But that was the image
that struck me today, still musing about why the death of a man I did not know
causes such a hiccup in my heart—Berger’s books gave me something I needed,
something I could hold, until the words slipped under my skin and into my
solid, mortal bones. His writing helped me become who I am, and now that I am
this creature with those particular tattoos on my bones, the only way forward
is to be the incarnation of all that blood and passion and light and critical
love and championing of this world.
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