The best most of us can desire for when we pass is that someone we sleep together in life might still be around to give us a tolerable eulogy . Not so for the epoch - defining author , whose acquaintance and adorer be given to includeotherepoch - defining writer . Their eulogies become part of a standard liberal humanities education , or else get issue in prestigious book sections . The literary encomium is an ancient art form with its own unique pressures ; below , we ’ve provided a grab - bagful of belletristic bereavement in all its forms , from 19th - 100 verse to twenty-first - century magazine writing .
1. “Adonais: An Elegy on the Death of John Keats,” by Percy Bysshe Shelley
It direct a picky kind of writerly myopia — plus a shaky , nineteenth - 100 - era conception of how TB work — to consider your acquaintance wasmurderedby a bad review . Such is the implicationof Shelley ’s " Adonais , " written shortly after Keats ' death from tuberculosis . In it , Shelley drop two stanzas lambasting the anon. critic ( later revealed to be John Wilson Croker ) whosavaged Keats ' " Endymion,“in the process prove himself an able and inventive vilification comedian : Shelley calls the critic a " deaf and murderous viper , " a " noteless blot on a remember’d name , " and a " beaten cad . " Of course , the elegy does much more than disgrace a critic ; it ’s a Graeco-Roman , astray - ranging tribute to his friend and sometimes rival .
2. “In Memory of WB Yeats,” by WH Auden
Auden ’s elegy for Yeats is in part responding to Milton ’s " Lycias . " modernistic sarcasm ca n’t aid but contend with 19th - century - fashion heartache : As critic Edward Mendelson points out in his bookLater Auden , Auden subverts the traditional English lament ( in which nature itself would mourn for the departed ) by depicting , in sheer prose , landscapes wholly unaltered by the poet ’s death ( " Far from his unwellness / The wolves ran on through evergreen plant forests … " ) .
His lament also wait on as a preemptive defense of Yeats , one Auden would elaborate on curtly after in " The Public vs. the Late William Butler Yeats . " W. B. Yeats had unusual spiritual view and tilt that some contemporary scholars would knight fascist , but in Auden ’s view , the baron of his speech communication would discharge him .
3.William Styronon Lillian Hellman
William Styron is today easily - known as the author ofSophie ’s Choice , a novel about the sexual and esthetic wakening of a psychotically horny twenty - something Brooklynite and the Holocaust . For decades , the writer alternately enjoy and endured a difficult friendship with Lillian Hellman , a film writer who set about to action Mary McCarthy for libel after Mary said , " [ E]very Holy Scripture [ Hellman ] write is a lie , let in and ' and the . ’ " Styron ’s refusal to abide her in that instancelead to a rupture in their friendship , and in his paean , hand over at a Massachusetts funeralattended by such luminary as Mike Nichols and Norman Mailer , he made no effort to whitewash that chronicle . Instead , he honors the imperative of their portion out professing , mingling the good with the unfit in the service of something approaching accuracy : " I think we had more fight per man and cleaning lady contact than belike anyone alive . " ( Notable that another of that sidereal day ’s speakers , Hiroshimaauthor John Hersey , also made a point to play up Hellman ’s rage : " wrath was her core , " he wrote . )
4. “Untitled,” Henry Van Dyke on Mark Twain
When Mark Twain bend 67 , his longtime admirer and advisor Henry Van Dykeread a verse form for himat the Metropolitan Club in New York City . Its last stemma was , " recollective lifespan to you , Mark Twain . " Just seven year later , he ’d be delivering the eulogy at Twain ’s funeral in New York City . In it , he provides a working definition of quality humor that everyone would be sassy to remember : " But the cross of this high humor is that it does not express joy at the weak , the helpless , the true , the guiltless ; only at the false , the ostentatious , the sleeveless , the hypocritical … we may say without doubt that [ Twain ] used his natural endowment , not for evil , but for good . "
ATimesreport from that daywrote , " Throughout it was evident that the loudspeaker was making a strong effort to keep down his emotion and control his voice . "
5. “Life in His Language,” Toni Morrison on James Baldwin
Toni Morrison wasclose friend withJames Baldwin , and when Baldwin conk of esophageal cancer in 1987 she compose this extremely make a motion tribute for theNew York Times . write as a second - somebody letter to Baldwin , the piece describes the " three natural endowment " Baldwin collapse to Morrison ( and , by extension , world lit ): Language , courage , and the ability to cut anger with tenderness .
There ’s no question Baldwin profoundly influenced Morrison ’s work , but what gives the piece its enormous big businessman — and what signalize it from , say , Auden ’s eulogy — is that his influence strain not just to her prose style but to the act of writing itself . Auden would n’t have had to appear too intemperate to discover a literary model , someone ' like him ' ; not so for Morrison , who from Baldwin learned " the courage of one who could go as a alien in the village and transform the length between people into intimacy with the whole humankind . "
6.“Flannery O’Connor: A Prose Elegy” by Thomas Merton
Given her workplace ’s fixation on Roman Catholicism , it ’s meet that one of the most moving eulogies written for Flannery O’Connor was written by Thomas Merton , a Catholic and a Trappist Monk who had long admire her body of work . First published in Jubilee in November , 1964 , the elegy is wholly free of biographic anecdote or recollection ; Merton chooses alternatively to talk over the set out ’s life exclusively in coitus to her body of work , take that when he reads O’Connor he does n’t " think of Hemingway , or Katherine Anne Porter , or Sartre , but rather of someone like Sophocles . "
7.“The Common Reader” by Virginia Woolf (on Joseph Conrad)
In the period of frantic innovation that was modernism , it would seem no occasion was improper tothrow wraith on a compeer ’s writing expressive style . Joseph Conrad , author of AP lit perennialHeart of Darkness , exit in August 1924 . after that same month , Virginia Woolf ’s eulogy - cum - critique appear in theTimesLiterary Supplement . Her art object is intensely admiring , and spread with a beautiful euphemism : " Suddenly , without giving us time to set up our thoughts or educate our phrases , our node has left us . " Still , she does n’t resist earnestly critique his extremely processed elan ’s ability to catch the grain of twentieth - hundred life .
8. “Virginia Woolf: Eulogy,” by Christopher Isherwood
In middle age , Virginia Woolf was bothfriend to and publishing company of the young Christopher Isherwood — her publication house , Hogarth , published his first two novel — and when she died in 1941 Isherwood was asked to write a eulogy . He did , and at once repent it . In explain why , he gets at the heart of what makeseulogies so hard : " An attempt to speak simultaneously as the public eulogist and the secret lamenter is almost foredoom to falseness ; all the more so when you finger you are addressing stranger who could never really understand or manage . "
9.“Novelist Shelved,” by Norman Mailer (on Norman Mailer)
Perhaps no twentieth - 100 author was as concerned with their public paradigm as Normal Mailer , and so it make sense that theNaked and the Deadnovelist and New Journalism groundbreaker would want to eulogise himself . His satirical self - elegy , written twenty - eight years before his existent demise , has fun playing around with the Mailer Persona , positing an old - geezerhood Mailer being mourn by eleven of his fifteen X - married woman and paying over two million a yr in child supporting and maintenance . ( Not that far from realism , as an'80s profileby Martin Amis would break . ) It goes on : " At the memorial service of process , passages from his favorite literary works , all penned by himself , were read . " You get the sense that Mailer is onlykind ofkidding .
10.“Susan Sontag, Cosmophage,” by Wayne Kostenbaum
In critic Wayne Kostenbaum ’s infective tribute to Susan Sontag publish shortly after her dying , form and content are dead integrated . He publish of his hero ’s fondness for fragment , and structure his essay as a serial publication of them ; he writes of her seeking " prose cast that would permit maximum impulsion and roundabout way " and in his essay does nothingbutdrift and roundabout way , ping ecstatically from personal anecdote to shut analysis to playful hypothesis on Sontag ’s sexuality . He write of how Susan Sontag ’s restlessness and artistic " cosmophagy " ( defined as " the feeding of the world " ) inspired him — and in the summons , he exhort his lament ’s reader .
11.“Too Much Information,” by John Jeremiah Sullivan (on David Foster Wallace)
You could fill anInfinite Jest - distance book with only the verygoodeulogies pen after David Foster Wallace ’s tragic 2008 suicide , not to mention the decent or straight - up bad ones . John Jeremiah Sullivan ’s is so good it deserves its own bulk , a sentence per page , a laThis is Water . His elegy , occasioned by the discharge of Wallace ’s posthumousThe Pale King , discase by the bed of take in soundness that had begun to befog Wallace ’s study in the class following his expiry , while elucidating the qualities of perception and description that have bring in Wallace his obsessive readership .
