Yesterday, I visited the house where you were born. And I got chills.
I’ve chased you all over the US. I visited your grave in the Washington National Cathedral, I got chills there, too. I performed in a historic theater where you once lectured. Chills. I drove past the house where you died in Connecticut. Chills.
You see, I don’t have many heroes. I dislike the idea of personal idols. I have always felt that if you put someone on a pedestal it’s not fair to them, and it’s doubly unfair to yourself.
Because you can never measure up to an idol. Once you idealize someone you have degraded yourself. You have made the beautiful unattainable.
No matter how hard a man tries, his idol will always be “smarter,” “more exceptional,” or “better-looking.” All chances for growth diminish beneath the poisonous drug of comparison.
But you were no idol. You were never on a pedestal. You were always down here amongst us sinners. Groping your way through your own inner darkness and
silence.
You never had children, but you were maternal to me. I read your books as a young man, fatherless and lost, ignorant and uneducated, the victim of paternal suicide and I would imagine that you were my grandmother, sharing nuggets of wisdom only with me.
You were an artist whose medium was the English language. Your words were balm to me. And still are.
You once said: “We can decide to let our trials crush us, or we can convert them into forces for good.”
And: “Relationships are like Rome -- difficult to start out, incredible during the prosperity of the ‘golden age’, and unbearable during the fall. Then, a new kingdom will come along and the whole process will repeat itself until you come across a kingdom like Egypt... that thrives, and continues to flourish. This kingdom will become your best friend, your soul mate, and…
