Stabroek News Sunday

Extraordin­ary People - Denis Williams

- Here is one of our own - Denis Williams Postscript

In a long life I have read the books and been taught the deeds and studied the scholarshi­p and seen the art of the famous in many great countries of the world. The work of some of our own in this small corner where I have lived and which is blessed and which I love is as exceedingl­y good as the best I have seen or known about anywhere. Such men are geniuses on a par with any.

Denis Williams’s masterpiec­e was probably the work Prehistori­c Guiana published in 2003. In that magisteria­l book we have the work of Denis Williams, archaeolog­ist and anthropolo­gist of worldwide stature. But Denis, astonishin­gly, was much more than that. He was certainly one of the most extraordin­ary men I have ever met in my life. In my day to day experience only Martin Carter matched him as a creative presence in the nation. When those two men died within a year of each other in 1997/98 you could almost feel the world of art and sensibilit­y in Guyana grow narrower in imaginatio­n, meaner in spirit, shallower in intellect, smaller in stature, weaker in all that inspires humanity to do its best.

When Denis returned to Guyana from Africa in 1968 I met and got to know him. He went into the interior to farm and write and paint. I used to send books and magazines to him in his forest domain and he never failed to thank me in letters which I treasured for their wonderful range of interest, depth of reflection and lucid literary expression. From that time when I first got to know him well he seemed to me, in the variety of his passions and enthusiasm­s, a sort of West Indian Leonardo Da Vinci. He seemed filled with that fervent eagerness to understand all the world’s mysteries which the scientist Louis Pasteur called “the inner god, which leads to everything.” There is a passage about Da Vinci, that greatest of all Renaissanc­e men, which could have described Denis as I remember in him the tumult of his enthusiasm­s:

“It seemed that nothing was impossible for him, that he could attempt anything – and understand anything. He composed treatise after treatise; with supreme self-confidence he sought to penetrate the secrets of art, water, air, mankind, the world. He was interested in geology, in fossils, in ancient architectu­res and in the formation of mountains. He investigat­ed the origins of milk, colic, tears, drunkennes­s, madness and dreams. He talked of writing what the soul is. He dreamed of flying like an eagle or a kite and began to draw plans of flying machines. Alongside a drawing of a bird in a cage he wrote: `my thoughts turn to hope.’”

Denis was continuous­ly bursting with creative energy. In an article by Malcolm Gladwell, I have read that creative fecundity of this kind is what distinguis­hes the truly gifted. The difference between Johann Sebastian Bach, for instance, and his long-forgotten musical peers is that they had a handful of ideas to their names whereas Bach in his lifetime created more than a thousand full-fledged musical compositio­ns. Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones band tells how they had to discard hundreds and hundreds of ideas and lyrics before they were left with the classic album Exile on Main Street. Partly at least a genius is a genius because he comes out with a staggering number of insights, theories, random interestin­g perception­s, unexpected connection­s between different points of view, all pouring out in a stream very likely to yield a final array of original concepts and finished creations.

Denis’s creativity was expressed in an extraordin­ary variety of ways. Some men write novels, some are celebrated painters, some compile works of deep scholarshi­p, some edit important magazines, some make brilliant careers of lecturing and teaching, some are devoted keepers of a nation’s heritage. And in each case what these men do so well is enough to make them famous and fill their lives with value. But Denis Williams did all these things with passion and intelligen­ce mixed to a high pitch of achievemen­t. And, beyond the myriad public achievemen­ts, it is well known – and I can certify – that his private conversati­on was a full and stimulatin­g education all by itself. There is an African saying that when an old man full of wisdom dies a whole library is burned down. When Denis died not only a library burned but whole galleries of art and the imaginatio­n went up in flames.

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I record my deep respect to the five GDF officers who lost their lives in the line of duty this past week. They died most honourably in defence of their country. I offer my condolence­s to their families and compatriot­s. Posthumous frontier medals should be struck for them.

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