| Poetry |
|
THE NOTICE OF A LADY PRUNING I came into a dangerous place,
Each day the sun brings this world’s
new,
Seeing, I was the sufferer,
Philosophy consoled my notice
There was a lady in the garden
II. THE RETIRED MOTHER It was a chickenwire fence
Often the roaming neighbor eye
Or reaching to a bush with shears,
Toward winter a son visited
And in his shirt’s woven enclosure
But how did she decide on pride,
The tautological tramp of each thing,
Note : I spent much of my senior
year at Harvard, l967-8, writing this poem for Robert Lowell’s poetry composition
class. At the same time—I was 20-21 -- I was writing my thesis on
Chapman’s Homer, a minitious textual comparison of a
passage in Chapman’s Elizabethan translation of the Odyssey with the Greek
original. I was much taken by Chapman’s way of emphasizing the archetypal,
Platonic function or -ness or "nature" of things, and that sort of
self-consciousness infuses the language of “The Notice of A Lady
Pruning,”
Lowell didn’t think much of this poem. He thought the best one I showed him was a much shorter one, called “To My Father.” To you who aren’t thoughtful in this
fashion,
In those days a great poet was still considered to be an oracle of his time. That ended with the death of Frost, was the hoary voice of America. The Harvard English Department was still worshiping the canon of T.S. Eliot, and “The Notice of a Lady Pruning,” with its classical allusions, must have been one of the last ambitious efforts in that tradition. The Atlantic turned it down, and it has lain mouldering in a trunkful of juvenilia in my study in the Adirondacks until this moment, when I have fished it out, looking for evidence, for a book on Tibetan Buddhism that I am writing, that I was even then aware of samsaric, neurally modulated nature of perception. One day, I heard “Another Side of Bob Dylan,” and realized that he was the oracle of my time, the sixties, which I would not fully embrace until a few years later. Overnight my role model changed from Eliot to Dylan, and by l970 I had morphed into a singer-songwriter. By then, poetry no longer played a central role in the culture. It was operating in a cultural vacuum. Poets had become, to borrow a metaphor from the western spadefoot toad, a shrinking pool of carnivorous tadpoles, competing ferociously for limited grants and niches in academe. Success as a poet became a matter of muscling your way into the little grupinho, winning a prize became a much function of the poet’s political skills as his literary talent. It wasn’t a game that I had much interest in playing, and accordingly my Muse croaked on the night police beat of the Washington Post in the riot-torn summer of l968. Is the same thing now happening with “literary non-fiction,” the genre I began to practice in the mid-seventies, with John MacPhee and Peter Mathiessen as my role models. The sort of rigorous, classic liberal-arts education I had, with eight years of ancient Greek, etc., is now obsolete, according a recent broadcast on Vermont public radio. There is so much information out there that people only have time to absorb brief treatments of any one subject. The culture is morphing very quickly, and I don’t have much excitement about where it is going, and or much interest in trying to keep up with it, in learning the hip talk of gen whatever. So this site has become not only about vanishing species and cultures, but of a vanishing breed of writer—moi. I guess I’ll just keep doing my thing, and we’ll all go out together. But there is still a place for poetry, especially in other cultures where it is still appreciated. It is an elemental form of expression, like music, that wells up from the depths of our being. My old friend from New Hampshire hippie days, John Van Hazinga, who is living like a crazy yogin/sage alone in the woods, growing fruit trees and grafting new strains of fruit, writes haiku-like poems, sometimes several a day, that he e-mails. I call them hazinkus. Here’s one called “Another Poem Ending in Mayonnaise” : All I really want to do
Put on my bib overalls,
Head down the highway
While sipping plum wine
That once contained
|