As I listened to the "Beguine," I reached back into the box and pulled out Robert Fulghum's "Words I Wish I Wrote," published in 1997. I had purchased the paperback as soon as it was available a few years later. The book fell open to a passage from an essay written by James Baldwin in 1964 called "Nothing Personal," and I started reading. He wrote about a social pandemic he and many, many others lived every day of their lives. My dad had fought a war that, in its retelling, was supposed to help end injustices against peoples, though I am not sure the average American soldier truly understood what was at stake at the time. World Wars have a habit of changing everything.
Fulghum selected this passage for his book:
"People are defeated or go mad or die in many, many ways, some in the silence of that valley, where I couldn't hear nobody pray, and many in the public, sounding horror where no cry or lament or song or hope can disentangle itself from the roar. And so we go under, victims of that universal cruelty which lives in the heart and in the world, victims of the universal indifference to the fate of another, victims of the universal fear of love, proof of the absolute impossibility of achieving a life without love. One day, perhaps, unimaginable generations hence, we will evolve into the knowledge that human beings are more important than real estate and will permit this knowledge to become the ruling principle of our lives. For I do not for an instant doubt, and I will go to my grave believing, that we can build Jerusalem, if we will."
Not in Fulghum's book is the ending of the essay:
"For nothing is fixed, forever and forever and forever, it is not fixed; the earth is always shifting, the light is always changing, the sea does not cease to grind down rock. Generations do not cease to be born, and we are responsible to them because we are the only witnesses they have.
The sea rises, the light fails, lovers cling to each other, and children cling to us. The moment we cease to hold each other, the moment we break faith with one another, the sea engulfs us and the light goes out."
It seems both Cole Porter and James Baldwin had come together at my desk to remind me — us — to "Begin the Beguine" so that we remember the steps that make us human and to have faith.
"Oh yes, let them begin the beguine, make them play
Till the stars that were there before return above you,
Till you whisper to me once more,
Darling, I love you!
And we suddenly know What heaven we're in,
When they begin the beguine."
Baldwin's essay is available here at scholarworks.umass.edu.