After his unexpected defeat in the Republican primary, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor opened a press conference by saying, "In the Jewish faith, you know, I grew up, went to Hebrew school, read a lot in the Old Testament, and you learn a lot about individual setbacks."

This is not mere piety, and the King James Version of the Bible, made up of the Old Testament and the New, is a terrific book. The heroes of these stories do not lead the race wire to wire. Those who are elevated are tested and taught by disaster.

To the reader of Genesis the pattern is inescapable. Joseph, Jacob's favorite son, who knew the secret of interpreting dreams 2 millennia before Sigmund Freud, is sold into slavery and ends up in Egypt. His brothers bloody the boy's coat of many colors and bring it home to break their old father's heart — Jacob, who had wrestled an angel to a standstill and was rewarded with a new and blessed name (Israel) and penalized with a wound (an injured leg).

Joseph becomes his Egyptian master's favorite, but then is falsely accused of sexual harassment and goes to prison, where he makes his reputation as an interpreter of dreams. When he translates the dreams that trouble Pharaoh and gives the monarch wise counsel, he becomes viceroy of all the land.

This story is epic poetry of the highest order — written with strict economy and bold directness. Here's what Jacob says when he learns of his son's ascendancy: "It is enough; Joseph my son is yet alive; I will go and see him before I die." The eloquence is in the simplicity.

Cantor, the man who was a step away from high glory, may well take some pensive consolation from the story of Joseph — or from "Election Day, November 1884," Walt Whitman's Bible-quoting poem in which the "the still, small voice" of the divine rests in "America's choosing day." The determination of that "peaceful choice" is more powerful "than all Rome's wars of old."

David Lehman's New and Selected Poems came out in November 2013 from Scribner.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

And one more little meditation on Eric Cantor, this time from literature. For our series This Week's Must Read, poet David Lehman recommends a book for those still surprised by the political upset.

DAVID LEHMAN: After Eric Cantor lost his Republican primary, he held a press conference. And this is what he said. In the Jewish faith, you know, I grew up, went to Hebrew school, read a lot in the Old Testament. And you learn a lot about individual setbacks. This isn't just piety. The King James Bible made up of the Old Testament and the New is a terrific book. The heroes of these stories don't have it easy. The ones who are elevated are tested and taught by disaster. If you're a reader of Genesis, you know the pattern. Joseph is sold into slavery and ends up in Egypt. His brothers bloody the boy's coat of many colors and bring it home to break their old father Jacob's heart. Joseph becomes his Egyptian master's favorite. But then he's falsely accused of sexual harassment and goes to prison. There, he makes his reputation as an interpreter of dreams. And when he wisely translates the ones that trouble Pharaoh, he becomes viceroy of all the land. This story is epic poetry of the highest order, written with strict economy and bold directness. Here's what Jacob says, when he learns of his son's triumph. (Reading) It is enough. Joseph, my son, is yet alive. I will go and see him, before I die. The eloquence is in the simplicity. Eric Cantor, the man who was a step away from glory, may take some consolation from the story of Joseph or maybe he'd be more comforted by an American. The Bible quoting, Walt Whitman, who told us in his poem, Election Day, November, 1884, that the still small voice of the divine rests in America's choosing day, that peaceful choice is more powerful than all Rome's wars of old.

BLOCK: That's David Lehman. His "New And Selected Poems" came out last year. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

300x250 Ad

Support quality journalism, like the story above, with your gift right now.

Donate