By Lawrence Henry on 3.14.08 @ 12:07AM
It seemed to flow freely for Bill Buckley for so long. His good friend L. Brent Bozell, Jr. was not so fortunate.
William F. Buckley became famous very young when he published
his critical essay on Yale University, God and Man at
Yale. That was 1951, a year after his graduation from
Yale.
His Yale years marked his life in other profound ways. He was
apparently assigned to room with one L. Brent Bozell, Jr. These two
lights stormed Yale together.
There exists a photograph of the two of them, probably about the
time they co-wrote McCarthy and His Enemies, in 1954.
Still looking like brilliant college boys, they face what is
apparently some kind of audience -- a press conference, perhaps.
Buckley leans back in his familiar languid posture, a great grin on
his face. Bozell, the redheaded tornado from Omaha, sits bolt
upright, a hand raised, engaged in animated conversation, his face
alight.
Buckley married Pat Taylor in 1950. Bozell married Buckley's
sister Patricia Lee Buckley, and the two had ten children. One
would have supposed them to be bound together for the rest of their
lives, grand pals into old age. It was not to be.
BOZELL GOT HIS law degree from Yale in 1953 and moved to California
to start a practice. His interests drew him back to Washington,
where he collaborated with Buckley on the aforementioned McCarthy
book, worked as a senior editor for Buckley's new magazine,
National Review, founded in 1955, and wrote what became
"the best-selling polemic of all time" (Buckley), Barry Goldwater's
Conscience of a Conservative.
Strangely, since National Review always displayed a
substantial streak of orthodox Catholic philosophy, his break with
Buckley came over Catholicism. Bozell moved to Spain and founded
the magazine Triumph, "devoted to Catholic thought," as
Buckley wrote, sparingly, in his 1997 obituary for Bozell. "It was
a profound venture, theocratical in orientation, in one sense
another expression of the totalist tendencies of the culture of the
1960s."
John B. Judis treats the conflict between the two former
roommates more frankly. Quoted in a review by Dr. Enrico Pappas on
Intellectual Conservative's list of Top 25 Philosophical and
Ideological Conservative Books, (William F. Buckley, Jr.,
Patron Saint of the Conservatives), Judis writes:
It was clear that Bozell thought outside of the
right-wing establishment. After a series of rebuffs by Buckley in
effect, warning both privately and publicly that his sister's
brilliant husband had become eccentric over the Catholic Thing,
Bozell organized Triumph magazine and struck out on his
own.
Then Bozell's mental health began its decline and the break with
Buckley became final. Neal Freeman had reported that, "I think
Bozell's deterioration hurt Bill more than anybody...Brent simply
started to fade, and you could see it happening, but you couldn't
do anything about it."
BOZELL, IT DEVELOPED, suffered from a bipolar disorder, known then
simply as "manic depression." His son, L. Brent Bozell III, now
head of Media Research Center and Newsbusters, remarked in his
funeral eulogy that
Dozens of times over...25 years the attacks would come,
and with each bout, yet another blow, yet another public
humiliation. There were arrests and forced hospitalizations,
escapes and re-arrests and recommitments. There was the
never-ending parade of lawyers, police, doctors, and, yes, from
time to time the State Department was on the line to brief us on
yet another prospective international upheaval caused by this very
unpredictable man.
Manic depression by itself is enough to break the spirit of any
man, but Pop was no ordinary man. He suffered from peripheral
neuropathy, sleep apnea, osteoporosis, degenerative disk disease,
asthma, and Alzheimer's. One by one they came, and when it seemed
that no part of his body had been left untouched yet a new illness
was diagnosed.
THE SPECTACLE EVOKES sorrow and pity to this day. I will indulge in
a preposterous bout of speculation and presumption here. I had
brilliant friend in college, too, and we were separated shortly
thereafter, and I never saw him again. For me, and, I think, for
Buckley, our friends were therefore preserved in the glittering
amber of eternal youth.
For William F. Buckley, who died week before last, I think that
memory served him well as he appointed successors to carry on his
life's work with National Review. In 1997, Buckley chose
the-then 28-year-old Rich Lowry to be editor of NR. Lowry
describes himself as "young, inexperienced" at the time, in his
Editor's Note to the memorial edition to WFB of National
Review.
Indeed he was. He had graduated from the University of Virginia
in 1990. At college, he had edited a monthly conservative magazine.
He joined NR in 1992, as his bio notes, "after finishing
second in a National Review writers' contest." He became
the magazine's articles editor, then moved to Washington, D.C. to
cover Congress.
I thought at the time -- greatly presuming, as I have said --
that something about Lowry reminded Buckley of his great good
friend Bozell. Buckley himself was, throughout his life,
perpetually youthful. It does not have to be so.
But how good it is, no matter the reason, that Buckley turned
his enterprise over to a man of about the same age and achievements
as himself when he started what Lowry calls "his dear magazine."
Long may it wave.
topics:
Catholicism, Books, Law