A blind boy plays with his mother’s face

My 87th Birthday has come and gone. I hear old Sam Beckett’s pessimistic shout: “We breathe, we change! We lose our hair, our teeth! Our bloom, our ideas!” Surely it is not a year since the last one. Doris Lessing in her autobiography Under My Skin describes how perception of time passing changes utterly as one gets older. She describes her experience as a child:

        How far away it was, the condition of being                          grown up and free, for I was still in the state                        when the end of the day could hardly be                                               glimpsed from its start…. There is no way of                                 conveying in words the difference between                         child-time and grown-up time…. in the story of            a life, if it is being told true to time as outwardly                experienced, then I’d say 70% of the book                            would take you to age 10. At 80% you would                       have reached 15. At 95% you get to about 30.                     The rest is a rush towards eternity.

 

That is perfectly true. As one gets older life becomes an ever-increasing blur of days, weeks, months, years. If one keeps a journal and looks back on it the days are packed enough with incidents and people and events, joys and fears and a hundred small triumphs and tribulations – as the days have always been. But it is the living through it all that gets quicker and quicker.  Someone has pushed the fast-forward button.

There is no time left for great achievements. Nobody gets a return match between himself and his destiny. The main tasks of life are already undertaken or nearly finished. The hectic concerns that ate up the hours are not half so insistent and seem not one tenth so important. What is called getting on in the world has for long seemed a fool’s pastime.

The quiet pleasures, the private delights, the sitting in the garden talking with my wife or reading as evening falls, matter much more now.  Going out in society, to parties and receptions, to any gathering except a meeting between close friends, becomes increasingly a burdensome chore to be avoided at all costs. And in any case such events are now banned by that hard task-master, C.Virus.

Increasingly, memories come out of the blue from scores of years in the past. For some reason at this time I remember when I was very young I went to a house where there was a blind boy in the family. I remember a dark room full of flowers. The boy played with his mother’s face with the fingers of both hands and he was smiling. Why does that particular picture come back so vividly now after more than 70 years?

More and more I see the truth of the 17th Century Japanese poet Tachibana Akemi’s “Poem of Solitary Delights,” which I first read in my twenties and which in those days puzzled me:

 

                What a delight it is

                When, borrowing

                Rare writings from a friend,

                I open out

                The first sheet.

                What a delight it is

                When a guest you cannot stand

                Arrives, then says to you

                “I’m afraid I can’t stay long”

                And soon goes home.

 

                What a delight it is

                When, reading of wild exploits,

                I hear about me daily

                The well-loved sounds

                Of a settled home.

 

                What a delight it is

                When night falls

                A graceful woman

                Brings fragrant candles

                And chilled glasses of wine.

 

                What a delight it is

                When after a hundred days

                Of racking my brains

                That verse that wouldn’t come

                Suddenly turns out well.

 

I have noticed a surprising development. As the years go by the beauty of ordinary things again becomes more sharply focused. When I was very young every day revealed fresh miracles of a shining world. Then there was a long period in the press of strenuous ambition and coping with the clutter of life when one lived without revelations.

 But now they begin to come again. I think even Samuel Beckett, the eternal fatalist, felt it in his aging bones: “What sky! What light! Ah, in spite of all, it is a blessed thing to be alive in such weather, and out of hospital.” This heightened perception I think must come in childhood and with age: in childhood because it is happening for the first time, in age because you may soon have to say goodbye. As the birthdays inexorably quicken their pace one can only be thankful for this unexpected blessing. Every day of life is worth a poem.