Thursday, July 1, 2010

This Poet's Choice: W.S. Merwin


While the Treegap Governess may appear to be remiss of late, it's only because reading is sometimes more important than writing and better yet, conversations about poetry trump mindless prattle into the blogosphere.

That said, I was overjoyed to know that W.S. Merwin was named the new Poet Laureate today. The position of Poet Laureate is a tad flimsy in America—the distinction ceremonial and rarely acknowledged—yet I’m glad our country still tries to honor poets with some kind of gesture. Before the Washington Post disbanded their BookWorld section entirely, each Sunday I had the privilege of reading a column about a poem selected by the Poet Laureate at the time (namely Wilbur, Dove, Brodsky, Haas and Pinsky), and that particular space was devoted to a new author or a new collection of poetry or reminded one to take another look at an old author or unexplored volume of poems. When the bottom line fell out of the newspaper business, BookWorld was the first to go and sadly, with it the “Poet’s Choice.”

While void of my weekly dosage of poetry via newspaper, I’ll never forget the day I bought my first Merwin book—instead of poems, I opted for “The Ends of the Earth,” a collection of essays which feel more like an historical novel and explanation of his philosophical outlook on life than merely essays feeding upon themselves. It was within that same year that the now defunct BookWorld gave him an honor as the Poet’s Choice for that week. It came from the paper on 11/20/05 and I remember cutting it out carefully with my scissors so as not to ruin the border of newsprint which would inevitably seep within the pores of my fingers. Today I took that book from off of my shelf, and from the inner spine fell that very clipping and it gave me a sort of good omen or hope for things to come.

Merwin has been around forever, it seems-- a being with an ancient soul you can only dream of having within your own chest. He is perhaps most famous for his lyric poems, addressed to everyone from his mother, friends, and even a “friend traveling” to emotions such as grief and even objects like his car, legs or glass. I love that this poet has been relevant, passionate and devoted to words for his entire existence.

Reading and writing are two of the best exercises I can think of. For that reason, I have selected three brief but powerful W.S. Merwin offerings to honor his new appointment. I hope he can inspire others to read, write and love and perhaps know something akin to the profundity in the basics of life.

Separation

Your absence has gone through me
Like thread through a needle
Everything I do is stitched with its color.

To Prose
…we know
only scattered fragments of you
glimpses of birds in bushes
gestures in car windows
of which we forget
at once almost everything
you define us
we are the ones who need you
we can no longer tell
whether we believe
anything without you
or whether we can hear
all that you are not
O web of answer
sea of forgetting is it true
that you remember

To Myself

Even when I forget you
I go on looking for you
I believe I would know you
I keep remembering you
sometimes long ago but then
other times I am sure you
were here for a moment before
and the air is still alive
around where you were and I
think then I can recognize
you who are always the same
who pretend to be time but
you are not time and who speak
in the words but you are not
what they say you who are not
lost when I do not find you

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Adventures in Research


The Indiana Jones Grail Tablet

 After a week of non-stop work on a demanding project for a resident genius, my brain has been lacking in poetic verbiage. Instead, I’ve been on number and wording check overdrive with, thankfully, a wonderful team of colleagues. Last week my sister and I had a conversation about crazy work weeks and we concurred that in order to really love what you do, no matter what the sector, position or field, it’s important to have excellent people beside you in the trenches.

One such colleague offered up this poem, a respite amid the madness, which apparently came from the pen of a university student in a statistics class. In our field of public opinion research, and even more so on the consultancy side, you have to be able to not only understand certain concepts, but be able to talk about them in layperson language, which is not always easy. Even if you know what the concepts are, how they are run and the syntax to run them, it’s still a gift to be able to tell someone in plain speech. In other words, it’s one thing to read the Olde English version of Beowulf while using an archaic dictionary, or even a middling modern translation of the epic poem, but quite another to read the beautiful version translated by Seamus Heaney. In the poet’s translation, the spirit of the original words come alive-- evoked by the use of perfectly conjoined words like “God-cursed Grendel,” which allows for an action-packed brevity to this great work more in tune with its true rendering.

So, this one is for my colleagues, who, on a regular basis work with me in translating numbers into stories and turn complex statistical methods into real English that, just maybe, even Seamus Heaney could understand.

On statistical terminology

by Cory Lation

Whoever invented statistical terms
Had a head that was stuffed with worms.
All these new words are so much junk,
And if I don't learn them, I'm really sunk.

Why's the bell-shaped curve called normal?
Is it normal to be so formal?
There's nothing mean about the mean.
Its just average, as is clearly seen.
And what's so standard about that deviation?
Its a really malicious creation.
Confusing students is its only function.
It frustrates and mystifies, in conjunction.

And who needs the variance?
It only rhymes with hairy ants.
Variance is what analysis is of,
But all my friends would just love
To take all the sums of squares we've seen
And put them within the instructor's between.

I'm just not sure about probability.
I think it caused the prof's early senility.
I often frequent relatively conditional joints,
But that won't get me statistical points.

"Histogram" throws me, at least a bit.
I remember the first time I heard of it.
I wanted an antihistogram to get rid of it.
But then I studied it, and after some beers,
I learned its a bar chart--there went my fears.
Just a bar chart--like Norm's tab at Cheers.

Skewness and kurtosis, there's a pair:
Something you'd wash out of your hair.

Research design, such a burn,
Just more weird terms to learn.
Your constructs are valid, so's your internal,
But if your validity isn't also external,
You should flush your data down the urinal
Or you'll go to a place where the heat is infernal
And study statistics for time eternal.

Then there's t, a test with jam and bread?
And F, the test that we all dread.
And what's so square about the chi?
If I don't get to the root of it, I'll just die.

Scatterplots, boxplots, stems-and-leaves grow,
Sounds like a radio gardening show.

Heteroscedasticity, now there's a word.
I think its when a turtle mates with a bird.

Then we study regression analysis,
A major cause of mental paralysis.
Least squares I like--minimize the nerds!
They like numbers better than words.
The most cools straight line--that's what we need.
I think I know where that line will lead.
Straight out of this class.
Were nearly done with this morass,
And my rhymes are running out of gas.
There's no chance I'll ever pass....

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

The Five W's (and one H)


One of the best things about loving words, writing and poetry is the unlimited number of ways to convey one simple idea. One of the worst things about loving words, writing and poetry is the unlimited number of ways to convey one single idea.

A couple of weeks ago I came across a reference to the sestina, a kind of poem that I remember writing as a class assignment a long time ago, one of many creative exercises that only the best kind of teacher mandates. Sestinas are tricky for their structural difficulty and to be true to form must consist of exactly six stanzas with six lines per stanza concluding with a tercet. These thirty nine lines are not only supposed to be written in iambic pentameter, but follow a strict form whereby each line must end with only the same six words repeated in a different, but structured (retrograde cross) order.

If this sounds part poem part crossword puzzle, it is but it isn’t. The formula is this:
Stanza 1=123456; Stanza 2= 615243; Stanza 3= 364125; Stanza 4= 532614; Stanza 5= 451362; Stanza 6= 246531. The tercet repeats the six ending words but in three lines in the order of line 1 (6 and 2); line 2 (1 and 4) and line 3 (5 and 3). And if you don’t care to know how it works but want to see one in action, here is a link to Elizabeth Bishop’s blandly titled  but beautifully written "Sestina"

In writing my first sestina, I recall plotting out those crucial six ending words that I would have to use over and over again and how using concrete objects was the easiest way to go in terms of having a product that flowed and meant something. Bishop’s Sestina does the same, using nouns as her finishing lines.

This time I took a different route and, while difficult, was worth the exercise. In doing so I found that the one thing I miss in the adult world of having to work for a living and spent less time on a writing life is not having Mrs. Kernutt’s challenges and creative daily assignments to force me to find more of these kids of assignments.

If anyone else wants to accept the sestina challenge, please forward your poems and I will post them here at Treegap.

Journalistically Speaking

In your new life who
do you go to and how
do you behave when
they ask about us what
do you say in that moment where
you’d rather die than ask yourself why.

Detectives are unsure why
the driver of the pick-up who
careened through six lanes of traffic where-
by striking the cyclist or how
impossibly tragic the timing in what
began as a normal day. Odds are when

we’re not looking, taking a routine ride when
feeling just fine wondering why
the life you chose is not exactly what
you intended and ends up being about who
time is spent with when no one is looking and how
lovely it would be to live in a place where

we take care of each other’s fingers and toes, where
fellow passengers on a train say something when
the unbreathing man in the next seat needs to know how
to get help before he expires and why
hundreds of thousands of commuters who
went in and out of that car all day cared not what

his life meant, more interested in what
the latest news has to say of the weather and where
to get dinner that night and maybe who
to share it with if we’re lucky enough or when
we’ll see someone we love. But why
has it come to this for us and how

unfixable is it? I still don’t know how
to be the new me around you and what
I want to be without you or why
the corners of the fitted sheet never round where
they’re supposed to only when
I make the bed without you. But who

cares that it’s my bed, why not ours instead, or how
it looks to the ghosts who sleep there and what
it means to mummify in sheets where a person lived back when.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Small Things Make A Good Life Great

The Treegap Governess has been on vacation. The hiatus has not been without poetic thoughts, contemplations or ideas about poetry. Rather the time away was a time to live poetry. George Eliot wrote in Middlemarch this lovely passage which perfectly captures how full and beautiful life is wherever you are as long as you attune your ears in appreciation:

If we had a keen vision of all that is ordinary in human life, it would be like hearing the grass grow or the squirrel’s heart beat, and we should die of that roar which is the other side of silent.

One of my favorite things recently was watching the two Squirrel Girls eat hand-broken walnut pieces from the doorstep of my parent’s house. At one point when I went to feed the particularly fearless diner, I feared she was going to rush inside the house as I opened the door. These two are characters, one even puts her paws up on the glass door as if she was a pet asking for a fist bump. It’s entirely possible the squirrel thinks I’m insane as I take a few minutes to wonder when she’ll be back, whether or not she’ll pose for my pictures after scattering the walnuts (quickly because I really kind of want to feed her out of my hand but am scared to be bitten), and could sit all day long watching their backyard antics. I can’t help but be fully entertained in watching her jowls kick into overdrive as she carefully picks up a nut piece with two long fingered paws and proceeds to chew quickly, eyes focused straight ahead as she concentrates on her task at hand.

My parents get the credit for becoming the parents of these fun Squirrel Nutkins. It’s their back yard and I was merely a passerby, a willing feeder in an established relationship. But I loved every second of it and can’t help but think that when I came back from my long run that Sunday to find Squirrel Girl standing upright at the front of the house, she was saying welcome back, where have your paws tread and when will I see you again?

In honor of the Squirrel Girls and my parents who feed them, this Emily Dickenson poem presents a thoughtful summation of how I think about friendships.

Number 1073 (c.1865)

Experiment to me
Is every one I meet
If it contain a Kernel
The Figure of a Nut

Presents upon a Tree
Equally plausibly,
But Meat within, is requisite
To Squirrels, and to Me.

A new original poem, a Sestina, will debut on Friday.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

The Art of War (Part II): Chroniclers of the Times

Goya's "The Tree Prisoners"

April 30 marked the 35th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War, perhaps the first war in which art and writing were publicized to reach a broader number of people. Continuing the conversation surrounding the artistry of war, it is with sadness that I believe that poets and artists in countries of military conflict must incorporate their conflicts in question in order to remain relevant regardless of whether or not they have a passion for such art. Goya, like Picasso, was more or less forced to chronicle the situation in Spain and genius poets like Seamus Heaney are forced to take questions from journalists regarding war. There is no longer an art for art’s sake any longer. The gene that makes a poet wake up every day and want to write doesn’t come with a media guide for how to speak or write about a particular war.

That said, journalists nowadays are considered artists in many cases, especially when embedded or of the photojournalist ilk. The writing and photography done in wartime brings out passionate pieces that the line between art and journalism has been blurred since the beginning of time. Here are two poems that strike me as directly offering up material for chronicling war in a most beautiful and direct way:

September Song

By Geoffrey Hill

Undesirable you may have been, untouchable
you were not. Not forgotten
or passed over at the proper time.

As estimated, you died. Things marched,
sufficient, to that end.
Just so much Zyklon and leather, patented
terror, so many routine cries.

(I have made
an elegy for myself it
is true)

September fattens on vines. Roses
flake from the wall. The smoke
of harmless fires drifts to my eyes.

This is plenty. This is more than enough.

Whatever You Say Say Nothing
By Seamus Heaney

I'm writing just after an encounter
With an English journalist in search of 'views
On the Irish thing'. I'm back in winter
Quarters where bad news is no longer news,

Where media-men and stringers sniff and point,
Where zoom lenses, recorders and coiled leads
Litter the hotels. The times are out of joint
But I incline as much to rosary beads

As to the jottings and analyses
Of politicians and newspapermen
Who've scribbled down the long campaign from gas
And protest to gelignite and sten,

Who proved upon their pulses 'escalate',
'Backlash' and 'crack down', 'the provisional wing',
'Polarization' and 'long-standing hate'?
Yet I live here, I live here too, I sing,

Expertly civil tongued with civil neighbours
On the high wires of first wireless reports,
Sucking the fake taste, the stony flavours
Of those sanctioned, old, elaborate retorts:

'Oh, it's disgraceful, surely, I agree,'
'Where's it going to end?' 'It's getting worse.' '
They're murderers.' 'Internment, understandably. .
The 'voice of sanity' is getting hoarse.

II

Men die at hand. In blasted street and home
The gelignite's a common sound effect:
As the man said when Celtic won, 'The Pope of Rome's
a happy man this night.' His flock suspect

In their deepest heart of hearts the heretic
Has come at last to heel and to the stake.
We tremble near the flames but want no truck
With the actual firing. We're on the make

As ever. Long sucking the hind tit
Cold as a witch's and as hard to swallow
Still leaves us fork-tongued on the border bit:
The liberal papist note sounds hollow

When amplified and mixed in with the bangs
That shake all hearts and windows day and night.
(It's tempting here to rhyme on 'labour pangs'
And diagnose a rebirth in our plight

But that would be to ignore other symptoms.
Last night you didn't need a stethoscope
To hear the eructation of Orange drums
Allergic equally to Pearse and Pope.)

On all sides 'little platoons' are mustering-
The phrase is Cruise O'Brien's via that great
Backlash, Burke-while I sit here with a pestering
Drouth for words at once both gaff and bait

To lure the tribal shoals to epigram
And order. I believe any of us
Could draw the line through bigotry and sham
Given the right line, aere perennius.

III

'Religion's never mentioned here,' of course.
'You know them by their eyes,' and hold your tongue.
'One side's as bad as the other,' never worse.
Christ, it's near time that some small leak was sprung

In the great dykes the Dutchman made
To dam the dangerous tide that followed Seamus.
Yet for all this art and sedentary trade
I am incapable. The famous

Northern reticence, the tight gag of place
And times: yes, yes. Of the 'wee six' I sing
Where to be saved you only must save face
And whatever you say, you say nothing.

Smoke-signals are loud-mouthed compared with us:
Manoeuvrings to find out name and school,
Subtle discrimination by addresses
With hardly an exception to the rule

That Norman, Ken and Sidney signalled Prod
And Seamus (call me Sean) was sure-fire Pape.
O land of password, handgrip, wink and nod,
Of open minds as open as a trap,

Where tongues lie coiled, as under flames lie wicks,
Where half of us, as in a wooden horse
Were cabin'd and confined like wily Greeks,
Besieged within the siege, whispering morse.

IV

This morning from a dewy motorway
I saw the new camp for the internees:
A bomb had left a crater of fresh clay
In the roadside, and over in the trees

Machine-gun posts defined a real stockade.
There was that white mist you get on a low ground
And it was deja -vu, some film made
Of Stalag 17, a bad dream with no sound.

Is there a life before death? That's chalked up
In Ballymurphy. Competence with pain,
Coherent miseries, a bit and sup,
We hug our little destiny again.


 Eddie Adams' famous photograph from the Vietnam war









Monday, April 26, 2010

The Bomb's the Thing: Art of War (Part I)

I was fortunate to grow up in peacetime in America, a generation born of parents who had seen the Vietnam War and before that endured school drills instructing them how to hide under desks to brace for an atom bomb. I went to a high school with Model UN where we learned diplomacy is how you solved problems. We only read of the horrors of the trenches, lived through a Cold War with few concerns for our safety.  We read The Song of Roland, Homer, Catch 22, Housman and Kipling and I think most of us believed the epic battles were over. We were “We Are The World.”

And then I wizened up. Rwanda, the Congo, Bosnia and Croatia, ongoing ethnic conflicts around the globe became the focus of the day and they became my passion in terms of how they were reported and being studied. In 2000 I found myself in Belfast studying all of this but also how art is impacted/made from war or conflict situations. And it saddened me to no end when two weeks into the US invasion of Iraq, massive looting and burning of museums and centuries old literature meant the destruction of many centuries of culture. A crisis of cultural identity, I fear, will only make things worse while groups claim ownership of the past.

And while all of my passion and education surrounding this topic has been useful and informs what I do for a living, I hadn’t thought about art and culture and war in a while, which is why I was truly moved to see someone actually write about this topic in my Sunday newspaper. Philip Kennicott’s commentary “War is Hell (On Art Too)” focuses on a new exhibition featuring contemporary Lebanese art shown at American University. The point of his well written article boils down to this: “Art doesn’t make sense of war. It’s the other way around.” In other words, if you’re an artist in (insert any war-torn conflict zone in its heightened state here) you either create art about the conflict or the way in which the conflict affects your society/people/country, or you’re irrelevant.

Think about Yeats. He was a poet who, after chronicling and eulogizing his society’s problems and martyrs started writing poems about twisting gyres and mysticism and got criticized for moving into a “crazy period.” I think he was sick and of writing about Ireland’s problems. He was a brilliant writer, he probably should have gone to Europe with James Joyce.

Would Salman Rushdie be famous or as well known today if he hadn’t written about the very minute at midnight when children like him (aka his country of India) was partitioned in 1947? Perhaps, but it’s doubtful that a novel about anything else would have caused the Supreme Leader of Islam to declare a fatwa against him.

Throughout history artists have chronicled events and perhaps influenced the way in which history is written and interpreted, which is why artists living in countries of war are deemed irrelevant if they don’t produce art reflecting that very conflict. The most touching and sad part of Kennicott’s critique of the Lebanese exhibit comes from an artist named Chaouki Chamoun who says “During the war, I stopped painting. I never wanted anyone to live off my pain.” In the end, his works turn out to be the least appealing, losing out to the edgier, more visually stunning works of his countrymen.

While art outlasts war, war overpowers the era in which art is created. Here are two poems that, while distinctly different in tone are viscerally and visually brilliant and could perhaps be applied to any war.  I find them equally brilliant. 

Redeployment
By Howard Nemerov

They say the war is over. But water still
Comes bloody from the taps, and my pet cat
In his disorder vomits worms which crawl
Swiftly away. Maybe they leave the house.
These worms are white and flecked with the cat’s blood.

The war may be over. I know a man
Who keeps a pleasant souvenir, he keeps
A soldier’s dead blue eyeballs that he found
Somewhere—hard as chalk, and blue as slate.
He clicks them in his pocket when he talks.

And now there are cockroaches in the house,
They get slightly drunk on DDT,
Are fast, hard, shifty—can be drowned but not
Without you hold them under quite some time.
People say the Mexican kind can fly.

The end of the war. I took it quietly
Enough. I tried to wash the dirt out of
My hair and from under my fingernails,
I dressed in clean white clothes and went to bed.
I heard the dust falling between the walls.

It is Dangerous to Read Newspapers
By Margaret Atwood

While I was building neat
castles in the sandbox,
the hasty pits were
filling with bulldozed corpses

and as I walked to the school
washed and combed, my feet
stepping on the cracks in the cement
detonated red bombs.

Now I am grownup
and literate, and I sit in my chair
as quietly as a fuse

and the jungles are flaming, the under-
brush is charged with soldiers,
the names on the difficult
maps go up in smoke.

I am the cause, I am a stockpile of chemical
toys, my body
is a deadly gadget,
I reach out in love, my hands are guns,
my good intentions are completely lethal.

Even my
passive eyes transmute
everything I look at to the pocked
black and white of a war photo,
how
can I stop myself.

It is dangerous to read newspapers.

Each time I hit a key
on my electric typewriter,
speaking of peaceful trees

another village explodes.

"War" by Ahmed Nussaif of Iraq, 2006.

(Part II of this post to come)

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

A Brief Beauty; A Lasting Peace?

Taken by Nicole Speulda 4.3.10

I’m not sure what tour guides in DC say about the Cherry Blossoms but thanks to a lovely last few weeks there are a lot of them this year out on the mall, talking about how Japan gifted us these seeds and how they were lovingly planted along the Tidal Basin in 1912. It’s true, in 1912 Japan gave the U.S. government 3,020 cherry blossom trees as a symbol of diplomatic courtship—the card reading “let’s be friends.” What I doubt these tour guides mention is how the majority of these trees were killed during the construction of the Jefferson Memorial (beginning 1939 and finishing in 1943), a tremendous monument that completes the 5 points along the mall.  The Jefferson is magnificent, one of my favorite monuments, and I’m glad he’s there, but the trees paid the price.

Two years after the original cherry trees were plowed under, the U.S. reciprocated by delivering its own present: 9,700 pounds of uranium 235 (12.5 kilotons of TNT) and named this gift “little boy,” for the city of Hiroshima and then two days later, spread its "fat man," seed-- 20 kilotons of TNT in the form of plutonium in Nagasaki.

What I find most remarkable, or perhaps poetic, is that the trees I see today are actually a re-gift;  In 1965 the Japanese government gave us a second batch of seedlings, this time 3,800 trees.  Maybe it's just me but I'm not so sure I'd offer up beauty after that, but they did.  For me it's a reminder of the power of good-will, symbolism and embracing the future.
In the week and a half since my sojourn to the cherry blossoms at their peak their beauty has stuck with me as well as all of the people who come to view them. It’s an international event and this time it just happens to coincide with the Nuclear Energy Summit. It reminds me to enjoy and appreciate the beauty of life because there are really horribly destructive options out there. So today we celebrate the loveliness of life option, of poetry and cherry trees.

The first poets to celebrate the cherry blossoms called them “sakura,” (“Japanese Flowering Cherry”), and the highest praise for their springtime symbolism and blooms changed throughout history depending on the age. Remarkably, Japanese historians can separate historical eras based on the way in which poets wrote about the sakura. Hanami (viewing the cherry blossoms), began when the Japanese capital was moved to Kyoto in 812 AD and was conceived as an event for the upper classes, something I envision in my mind as akin to Irving Berlin’s 1948 Easter Parade with Fred Astaire and Judy Garland and all the frills upon them.

The nobility in Japan would start important invocations with Sakura poems and the blossoms became a most important cultural tradition:

Looking at the Mountain Sakura in mist
I miss a person who looks at the Sakura
 ~ Kino Tsurayuki

If there were no cherry blossoms in the world,
My mind would be peaceful.
~ Fujiwara Norihira

Perhaps unsurprisingly, and if you’ve lived in DC for any period of time, the cherry blossom is associated with mortality as the blooming period is very short. Most years, April is a cruel month. The trees bloom and the very next day we’ll have high winds, a thunderstorm or two and the branches are stripped of their pink petals, naked for the next wave of onlookers. Here are some other Haikus celebrating life and death:

Shining spring day
Falling cherry blossoms with my calm mind
~ Kino Tomonari

Wishing to die under cherry blossoms in spring
Cherry blossom season in full moon time
~ Saigyo

Sleeping under the trees on Yoshino mountain
The spring breeze wearing Cherry blossom petals
~ Saigyo

Taken by Nicole Speulda 4.3.10

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Sanity Amid The Madness Of March

"March Madness" has many meanings. Between the lamb and lion weather-- upward springing buds followed by a thin permafrost—and a workload that was oddly up and down (sadly up on weekends), the insanity for me has been less about the NCAA men’s basketball tournament. But since that’s what the term was meant to describe, last week I was thinking about what these kids must be thinking going into games.

See, sports is what I grew up on, basketball being paramount. I remember winning a green ribbon inscribed in gold with a title that said “Most Tenacious Guard” when I was 9 years old. If you weren’t a naturally gifted beast in height or girth, the thing you had to be was good at hustle, defense and shooting. Playing with heart was where it was at and when I played, Oregon girls’ b-ball was quite good. I never made it to a Final Four in college, not even close, but there are some things athletes always carry with them, especially competitive athletes, and lately I’ve been thinking about how it behooves people in life to carry around the good things you learn from athletic experience.

With all of the bad news lately surround athletes in all sports, I think it’s a good reminder that it may behoove everyone, even the cream of the crop to read this poem and think of the advice Kipling offers.  I wish we still lived in an era in which a girl growing up could tack up her walls with posters of stand-up NBA players like Larry Bird and her parents wouldn't have to worry that next week he will have to hold a press conference.  Nobody’s perfect, but there are some good life lessons here and in this season of spring where the proverbial leaf is turned, one or two may resonate with you too.

An Aside:  For basketball lovers, particularly those who enjoyed the very special 1980's NBA era, I highly recommend the new HBO movie Magic & Bird: A Courtship of Rivals.  It's an excellent film, interviewing both of them today but filled with clips and highlights and other influentials in their lives.  A pleasure to watch in these maddening times!

If
by Rudyard Kipling

If you can keep your head when all about you
Are losing theirs and blaming it on you,
If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,
But make allowances for their doubting too;

If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,
Or being lied about, don’t deal in lies,
Or being hated, don’t give way to hating,
And yet don’t look too good, nor talk too wise;

If you can dream - and not make dreams your master,
If you can think - and not make thoughts your aim,
If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two impostors just the same;

If you can bear to hear the truth you’ve spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fool,
Or watch the things you gave you life to, broken,
And stoop and build ‘em up with worn-out tools;

If you can make one heap of all your winnings
And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss,
And lose, and start again at your beginnings
And never breathe a word about your loss;

If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew
To serve your turn long after they are gone,
And so hold on when there is nothing in you
Except the Will which says to them: “Hold on!”

If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
Or walk with Kings - nor lose the common touch,
If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you,
If all men count with you, but none too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds’ worth of distance run,
Yours is the Earth and everything that’s in it,
And - which is more - you’ll be a Man, my son!

Saturday, March 20, 2010

When Seeing Isn't Healing: Yeats At His Peak

Yeats week concludes with the poem I not only memorized in 1998 before I went to Ireland for the first time but it is the poem I can never get out of my head. It’s beautifully written yet is so visual it has taken on many meanings for me throughout the years. Yeats wrote The Second Coming after WWI and in a period of his own life where he was re-examining his own spirituality. Much has been written about this particular poem but what I love about re-reading it from the text I had as an undergrad is that the notes I wrote in the margin are lucid and terse but I remember why I wrote each and every one of them.

This poem, historically, begins a period of Yeats’ writing in which he goes on to speak more about the “gyre” and his spirituality (which may be strange to some people) which will continue to be a favorite theme of his critics and biographers.  I tend to see this poem differently. I like to think Yeats saw WWI and what was happening in Ireland and perhaps around the world and felt that civilization itself was reverting to a more barbaric time, an unhappy phase of history that he couldn’t stomach as a writer, an artist and human. And I think this realization made the man a little numb from disappointment.

Maybe we all go through something like this during our lives where we think we can help change the world or at least we believe we can be part of improving things for the better. Yeats wrote The Second Coming when he was 54 years old (in 1919) old and I truly believe this signifies a turning point in his writing. By invoking images of the Sphinx, a lowering of light and a circling of what can only be considered to be vultures, or at least the nasty black birds that are everywhere in Dublin, this poem doesn’t signify much hope for the world.

I can’t say I blame him; Yeats lived in and through truly terrible times. But this is the poem, for me, where Yeats has reached his peak in terms of creating his own great stuff. Sure, he will go on to write political poems, spiritual poems, eulogize Parnell and others, but they aren’t his own poetry and I think he recognized his sad function as a writer before the world did. 

To me, this is his masterpiece. Thank you, William Butler Yeats, for being a poet, dramatist and writer of many colours, styles and themes and for being the timeless, ever-relevant author of things I'll always read. 

The Second Coming

Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.

Surely some revelation is at hand;
Surely the Second Coming is at hand.
The Second Coming! Hardly are those words out
When a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi
Troubles my sight: somewhere in sands of the desert
A shape with lion body and the head of a man,
A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun,
Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it
Reel shadows of the indignant desert birds.
The darkness drops again; but now I know
That twenty centuries of stony sleep
Were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Seeing Green: A Favorite From The Irish Master

Yeats week continues with one of my all time favorites, a poem that to this day dances in my head. I find it melodic and lovely in every way, just as Yeats would want it to be and instructed his fellow poets to do:

“Irish poets, learn your trade,
Sing whatever is well made.”

In his letters, Yeats was quite clear about his aversion to giving meaning or one true interpretation to his poetry as he wanted the reader to come up with their own thoughts, lend their own meanings. “If a poet interprets a poem of his own he limits its suggestibility.” True enough. Yeats remains largely enigmatic in some poems yet I find a great connection with nearly everything he wrote because I can find a way to make it my own.

The Stolen Child
Where dips the rocky highland
Of Sleuth Wood in the lake,
There lies a leafy island
Where flapping herons wake
The drowsy water rats;
There we've hid our faery vats,
Full of berries
And of reddest stolen cherries.
Come away, O human child!
To the waters and the wild
With a faery, hand in hand,
For the world's more full of weeping than you can understand.

Where the wave of moonlight glosses
The dim gray sands with light,
Far off by furthest Rosses
We foot it all the night,
Weaving olden dances
Mingling hands and mingling glances
Till the moon has taken flight;
To and fro we leap
And chase the frothy bubbles,
While the world is full of troubles
And anxious in its sleep.
Come away, O human child!
To the waters and the wild
With a faery, hand in hand,
For the world's more full of weeping than you can understand.

Where the wandering water gushes
From the hills above Glen-Car,
In pools among the rushes
That scarce could bathe a star,
We seek for slumbering trout
And whispering in their ears
Give them unquiet dreams;
Leaning softly out
From ferns that drop their tears
Over the young streams.
Come away, O human child!
To the waters and the wild
With a faery, hand in hand,
For the world's more full of weeping than you can understand.

Away with us he's going,
The solemn-eyed:
He'll hear no more the lowing
Of the calves on the warm hillside
Or the kettle on the hob
Sing peace into his breast,
Or see the brown mice bob
Round and round the oatmeal chest.
For he comes, the human child,
To the waters and the wild
With a faery, hand in hand,
For the world's more full of weeping than he can understand.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Stripping Down, Bearing All

One of my favorite Yeats poems is one of his shortest, a terse but tenacious declaration that he is taking his own poetry back. After years of writing nationalist anthems for the country he loved, anthologizing and eulogizing heroes, he grew tired of being "that poet." In 1916, Yeats started changing his views and ideologies, writing less romantically and taking on a more in-your-face and screw-the-world tone. Take my ideas, he says take all of my works and all of the times I tried to keep my country together and all of the things you thought my words meant. F-it. I'm a poet and I'm going to find something else. You can keep repeating my nationalist sentiments, singing them like songs, but I'm off to seek a higher power.

At least that's what I think he would say if we could have asked him about this, simply called "A Coat,” today’s featured poem. However, it would seem I’m not the only one who has thought a lot about this particular poem. Following the words of Yeats are a series of art sketches by Richard Diebenkom called “Etchings for Poems of W.B. Yeats." The first sketch in the 6-part series appears at the top of the post and the latter prints show the coat transformed into a divided Ireland.  Only in the magic of Yeats week would I find this lovely artist who was born in my native Oregon, but grew up in San Francisco and is probably one of a small group of people I would have wanted to meet if we lived at the same time. 

A Coat
W.B. Yeats

I made my song a coat
Covered with embroideries
Out of old mythologies
From heel to throat;
But he fools caught it,
Wore it in the world's eyes
As though they'd wrought it.
Song, let them take it,
For there's more enterprise
In walking naked.


Sunday, March 14, 2010

Irish Surprises For Shamrock Week


Last September, when got up the gumption to start this blog, I wanted to make sure this wasn’t a place where I highlighted well know poems, rather contributed to writing again, highlighting a wide variety of poets that would get me excited about writing again. While I take inventory on that, I am happy about the variety of things I’ve been interested in and how in six months, my poet’s ears are back on the ground. For me, that feels pretty good.

That said, this week some people may celebrate St. Patrick’s day and I’m going to get back to my Yeats. Each post this week will highlight a Yeats work (long or short), from obscure to well-known and I’ll offer up my thoughts, something I’ve wanted to do since I last had time to contemplate these things.  And there may be more than one post a day.  Yeats will not be the only one celebrated.

Let us start with a poem in which Yeats talks about frustration in his work as a theatre director. That would be the Abbey Theatre, he founded in 1903 just off the Liffey. The Abbey was little more than a revived shithole when I lived in Dublin and went there several times and I’m quite positive it was even more of a shithole when Yeats founded it. Today, I’m told it’s been revived again as Ireland’s National Theatre. Good on them-- when I go back I hope the bus stop out front isn’t vandalized.  (Judging from it's omission of any sort of current photograph on the website, I think that probably hasn't happened yet.)

This poem transcends professions, and I’m quite certain everyone who has ever had a job or run a household can relate to this sentiment. Sometimes things that appear difficult are complicated by knuckleheads bungling the process or is missing a variable here and there. Here Yeats is able to write about his day’s/week’s frustration in running the Abbey Theatre while making it so personal, it’s no wonder he had problems with his collaborator. First the poem:

The fascination of what's difficult

The fascination of what's difficult
Has dried the sap out of my veins, and rent
Spontaneous joy and natural content
Out of my heart. There's something ails our colt
That must, as if it had not holy blood
Nor on Olympus leaped from cloud to cloud,
Shiver under the lash, strain, sweat and jolt
As though it dragged road-metal. My curse on plays
That have to be set up in fifty ways,
On the day's war with every knave and dolt,
Theatre business, management of men.
I swear before the dawn comes round again
I'll find the stable and pull out the bolt.

Yeats wrote this during the production of the play “The Unicorn from the Stars,” and it’s presumed that the colt ailing his heart was titular unicorn and contributor Lady Gregory. To what extent we’ll never know, but for everyone out there starting their Monday work week, let us note that the fast pace of information flow and “give it to me now” culture we work in isn’t new to us. Yeats was clearly annoyed and ready to pull the plug. Let’s see if we, in our various professions can make it this one excellent Monday, and move on and reassess where Yeats may be on Tuesday.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Two Short Poetry Finds On A Lovely Rainy Friday


Ahh Friday. And what a beautiful Friday it’s been. It was gray, it misted and rained all day and I can’t wait to sleep tonight so I can hear that little pitter patter against my window. While bright sunny days are nice, my birthplace has instilled in me an appreciation for the rain that makes things grow and how wonderful it is to nap or sleep to that sound I love so well.
Poets have long used the changing of seasons as inspiration for poems but I had no idea that the man who created Winnie The Pooh could summarize how I feel about spring so succinctly and in his own creative and playful way:

Daffodowndilly
by A.A. Milne
She wore her yellow sun-bonnet,
She wore her greenest gown;
She turned to the south wind
And curtsied up and down.
She turned to the sunlight
And shook her yellow head,
And whispered to her neighbour:
"Winter is dead."

And lest we become too whimsical on this lovely rainy day, I’d like to celebrate a lesser known writer and poet who is noted for coming up with the English variation of the French 'Rondeau', Algemon Charles Swinburne. His lyric poem Atalanta in Calydon is the reason I started this blog. I didn’t read this in high school, it was not required reading in AP English or in any college courses I had, but I love finding new things for the first time. Here is the wonderful Chorus of the poem, also celebrating the coming of spring.
 
Atalanta in Calydon
by Algemon Charles Swinburne

CHORUS.

When the hounds of spring are on winter's traces,

The mother of months in meadow or plain
Fills the shadows and windy places

With lisp of leaves and ripple of rain;
And the brown bright nightingale amorous

Is half assuaged for Itylus,
For the Thracian ships and the foreign faces,

The tongueless vigil, and all the pain.

Come with bows bent and with emptying of quivers,
Maiden most perfect, lady of light,

With a noise of winds and many rivers,
With a clamour of waters, and with might;

Bind on thy sandals, Oh thou most fleet,
Over the splendour and speed of thy feet;

For the faint east quickens, the wan west shivers,
Round the feet of the day and the feet of the night.

Where shall we find her, how shall we sing to her,
Fold our hands round her knees, and cling?

Oh that man's heart were as fire and could spring to her,
Fire, or the strength of the streams that spring!

For the stars and the winds are unto her
As raiment, as songs of the harp-player;

For the risen stars and the fallen cling to her,
And the southwest-wind and the west-wind sing.

For winter's rains and ruins are over,
And all the season of snows and sins; The days dividing lover and lover,

The light that loses, the night that wins; And time remembered is grief forgotten, And frosts are slain and flowers begotten, And in green underwood and cover
Blossom by blossom the spring begins.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Enjoying The Signs Of Spring


In the midst of a busy week, sometimes the smallest of things give you a clue to get back to poetry. On a Wednesday morning that felt more like it should be Friday, I picked up a copy of the Metro Express, a smaller, free version of the Washington Post and flipped to the crossword puzzle while awaiting my morning bus. One of the clues referenced a work by poet James…AGEE, four letters down. A writer all his life, early in his life Agee wrote for Fortune, Time and film criticism in The Nation.

Perhaps best known as a writer of screenplays (The African Queen; The Night of the Hunter), Agee also wrote books, was a freelance journalist, movie and art criticism and smaller eclectic pieces and could probably write just about anything. Unfortunately he died at the age of 46, from a heart attack in a cab in New York on the way to his doctor’s office after a life of hard drinking and chain smoking. Turns out, he was a poet too.

It saddens me and serves as a reminder that so many talented, prolific and beautiful writers cut their own lives short by poisoning themselves to death. What a great reminder on this lovely spring day that life is indeed for living and not for dying.

Permit Me A Voyage
By James Agee

Take these who will as may be: I
Am careless now of what they fail:
My heart and mind discharted lie
And surely as the nerved nail

Appoints all quarters on the north
So now it designates him forth
My sovereign God my princely soul
Whereon my flesh is priestly stole:

Whence forth shall my heart and mind
To God through soul entirely bow,
Therein such strong increase to find
In truth as is my fate to know:

Small though that be great God I know
I know in this gigantic day
What God is ruined and I know
How labors with Godhead this day:

How from the porches of our sky
The crested glory is declined:
And hear with what translated cry
The stridden soul is overshined:

And how this world of wildness through
True poets shall walk who herald you:
Of whom God grant me of your grace
To be, that shall preserve this race.

Permit me voyage, Love, into your hands.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Oscar, Meet Oscar

Tonight is Oscar night, the annual event where celebrities come together for two hours of red carpet reveling and then spend the rest of the night honoring themselves, doing arm curls with those coveted golden statues. From talking about who’s wearing what to seeing who wins for each award, I do love the Academy Awards. I’m less invested this year because I found the quality of movies in 2009 to be far inferior than previous years. For me it was definitely a downer. The only thing I care about is not having to endure any speech by James Cameron, the “King of the World” in 1997 and a person who annoys me more than any other.

But it’s not really him, it’s his movie Avatar. The writing in that movie is atrocious. Everything out of Sigourney Weaver’s mouth was embarrassingly bad. But that’s the last of my Oscar night commentary. Now on to an Oscar who definitely knew how to write, Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde. Yes, that one.

I’d love to know what the flamboyant even in his time Oscar Wilde would think of all of this. Wilde was quite a character and I wish he were alive to blog and tweet about the styles, hair and make-up of everyone involved on this opulent awards night. I spent a good half hour today thinking about him, and how I often traced his paths along the streets of Dublin when I lived there over a decade ago. Wilde would love the costumes, the elegance of Sandra (for some reason being called "Sandy") Bullock’s hair, the breast enhancing dress of Charlize Theron, the undeniable beauty of Dame Helen Mirren and he definitely would have done something with George Clooney’s overgrown mop of hair. 
(Addendum: If you want entertainment via the blogosphere, try the Cooler).

Oscar Wilde once wrote “Anybody can make history. Only great men can write it.” I sincerely hope some good writers win tonight and some good actors have their fun. Who better to give us our poem for the day, appropriately with a golden title.

In The Gold Room-- A Harmony
by Oscar Wilde

Her ivory hands on the ivory keys
Strayed in a fitful fantasy,
Like the silver gleam when the poplar trees
Rustle their pale-leaves listlessly,
Or the drifting foam of a restless sea
When the waves show their teeth in the flying breeze.

Her gold hair fell on the wall of gold
Like the delicate gossamer tangles spun
On the burnished disk of the marigold,
Or the sunflower turning to meet the sun
When the gloom of the dark blue night is done,
And the spear of the lily is aureoled.

And her sweet red lips on these lips of mine
Burned like the ruby fire set
In the swinging lamp of a crimson shrine,
Or the bleeding wounds of the pomegranate,
Or the heart of the lotus drenched and wet
With the spilt-out blood of the rose-red wine.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

The Sweet Sounds Of March


The start of this week was wonderful; the sun finally came out and shone for a full day on Monday, a short-lived but welcome omen of the spring to come. Also a gift I took as the weather gods granting me warmth after a very cold spell on my birthday. The loveliness of the morning was wonderful and while it was a normal work day, and busy work week, the irony and poetry of life did not fail to gift itself to me or punch me in the face in a good way these last few days.

I’ve been listening to Garrison Keillor’s Writer’s Almanac every morning at 6:35am on WAMU for so many years now (and let’s not count at this point) but it was a happy reminder that I shared March 1 with poets Robert Lowell (1917), writer/poet Richard Wilbur (1921), and Howard Nemerov (1920). Not a bad bunch with which to share the day. That feeling was even better than eating cake and ice cream, which, let’s face it, isn’t the best for an aging frame starting to feel the effects of gravity.

But Keillor selected for the first of March, apropos of nothing, the first two stanza’s of William Wordsworth’s Intimations of Immortality, no link to birthdays or anything else. I loved it, Wordsworth on a day I didn’t know I wanted it. As we age these little things are important, like feeling loved by your family, friends even co-workers. When tiny fateful things happen like getting to enjoy an excerpt from Wordsworth and having the sun shine all day long, you know it’s a good day to be thankful for the gift of life.

While I appreciated Keillor’s selection, what I appreciated more was that it made me read the full poem and there are other parts I find even better. While a little long in the tooth in places – hey it’s a pastoral after all, what do you expect?—but I love final stanza and in order to get there the middle part is crucial to the overall understanding. While the rainbow may come and go, the poetry remains forever.

Ode: Intimations of Immortality
By William Wordsworth
I
There was a time when meadow, grove, and stream,
The earth, and every common sight,
To me did seem
Apparelled in celestial light,
The glory and the freshness of a dream.
It is not now as it hath been of yore;--
Turn wheresoe'er I may,
By night or day,
The things which I have seen I now can see no more.

II
The Rainbow comes and goes,
And lovely is the Rose,
The Moon doth with delight
Look round her when the heavens are bare,
Waters on a starry night
Are beautiful and fair;
The sunshine is a glorious birth;
But yet I know, where'er I go,
That there hath past away a glory from the earth.

III
Now, while the birds thus sing a joyous song,
And while the young lambs bound
As to the tabor's sound,
To me alone there came a thought of grief:
A timely utterance gave that thought relief,
And I again am strong:
The cataracts blow their trumpets from the steep;
No more shall grief of mine the season wrong;
I hear the Echoes through the mountains throng,
The Winds come to me from the fields of sleep,
And all the earth is gay;
Land and sea
Give themselves up to jollity,
And with the heart of May
Doth every Beast keep holiday;--
Thou Child of Joy,
Shout round me, let me hear thy shouts, thou happy
Shepherd-boy!

IV
Ye blessed Creatures, I have heard the call
Ye to each other make; I see
The heavens laugh with you in your jubilee;
My heart is at your festival,
My head hath its coronal,
The fulness of your bliss, I feel--I feel it all.
Oh evil day! if I were sullen
While Earth herself is adorning,
This sweet May-morning,
And the Children are culling
On every side,
In a thousand valleys far and wide,
Fresh flowers; while the sun shines warm,
And the Babe leaps up on his Mother's arm:--
I hear, I hear, with joy I hear!
--But there's a Tree, of many, one,
A single Field which I have looked upon,
Both of them speak of something that is gone:
The Pansy at my feet
Doth the same tale repeat:
Whither is fled the visionary gleam?
Where is it now, the glory and the dream?

V
Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting:
The Soul that rises with us, our life's Star,
Hath had elsewhere its setting,
And cometh from afar:
Not in entire forgetfulness,
And not in utter nakedness,
But trailing clouds of glory do we come
From God, who is our home:
Heaven lies about us in our infancy!
Shades of the prison-house begin to close
Upon the growing Boy,
But He beholds the light, and whence it flows,
He sees it in his joy;
The Youth, who daily farther from the east
Must travel, still is Nature's Priest,
And by the vision splendid
Is on his way attended;
At length the Man perceives it die away,
And fade into the light of common day.

VI
Earth fills her lap with pleasures of her own;
Yearnings she hath in her own natural kind,
And, even with something of a Mother's mind,
And no unworthy aim,
The homely Nurse doth all she can
To make her Foster-child, her Inmate Man,
Forget the glories he hath known,
And that imperial palace whence he came.

VII
Behold the Child among his new-born blisses,
A six years' Darling of a pigmy size!
See, where 'mid work of his own hand he lies,
Fretted by sallies of his mother's kisses,
With light upon him from his father's eyes!
See, at his feet, some little plan or chart,
Some fragment from his dream of human life,
Shaped by himself with newly-learned art;
A wedding or a festival,
A mourning or a funeral;
And this hath now his heart,
And unto this he frames his song:
Then will he fit his tongue
To dialogues of business, love, or strife;
But it will not be long
Ere this be thrown aside,
And with new joy and pride
The little Actor cons another part;
Filling from time to time his "humorous stage"
With all the Persons, down to palsied Age,
That Life brings with her in her equipage;
As if his whole vocation
Were endless imitation.

VIII
Thou, whose exterior semblance doth belie
Thy Soul's immensity;
Thou best Philosopher, who yet dost keep
Thy heritage, thou Eye among the blind,
That, deaf and silent, read'st the eternal deep,
Haunted for ever by the eternal mind,--
Mighty Prophet! Seer blest!
On whom those truths do rest,
Which we are toiling all our lives to find,
In darkness lost, the darkness of the grave;
Thou, over whom thy Immortality
Broods like the Day, a Master o'er a Slave,
A Presence which is not to be put by;
Thou little Child, yet glorious in the might
Of heaven-born freedom on thy being's height,
Why with such earnest pains dost thou provoke
The years to bring the inevitable yoke,
Thus blindly with thy blessedness at strife?
Full soon thy Soul shall have her earthly freight,
And custom lie upon thee with a weight
Heavy as frost, and deep almost as life!

IX
O joy! that in our embers
Is something that doth live,
That nature yet remembers
What was so fugitive!
The thought of our past years in me doth breed
Perpetual benediction: not indeed
For that which is most worthy to be blest--
Delight and liberty, the simple creed
Of Childhood, whether busy or at rest,
With new-fledged hope still fluttering in his breast:--
Not for these I raise
The song of thanks and praise;
But for those obstinate questionings
Of sense and outward things,
Fallings from us, vanishings;
Blank misgivings of a Creature
Moving about in worlds not realised,
High instincts before which our mortal Nature
Did tremble like a guilty Thing surprised:
But for those first affections,
Those shadowy recollections,
Which, be they what they may,
Are yet the fountain light of all our day,
Are yet a master light of all our seeing;
Uphold us, cherish, and have power to make
Our noisy years seem moments in the being
Of the eternal Silence: truths that wake,
To perish never;
Which neither listlessness, nor mad endeavour,
Nor Man nor Boy,
Nor all that is at enmity with joy,
Can utterly abolish or destroy!
Hence in a season of calm weather
Though inland far we be,
Our Souls have sight of that immortal sea
Which brought us hither,
Can in a moment travel thither,
And see the Children sport upon the shore,
And hear the mighty waters rolling evermore.

X
Then sing, ye Birds, sing, sing a joyous song!
And let the young Lambs bound
As to the tabor's sound!
We in thought will join your throng,
Ye that pipe and ye that play,
Ye that through your hearts to-day
Feel the gladness of the May!
What though the radiance which was once so bright
Be now for ever taken from my sight,
Though nothing can bring back the hour
Of splendour in the grass, of glory in the flower;
We will grieve not, rather find
Strength in what remains behind;
In the primal sympathy
Which having been must ever be;
In the soothing thoughts that spring
Out of human suffering;
In the faith that looks through death,
In years that bring the philosophic mind.

XI
And O, ye Fountains, Meadows, Hills, and Groves,
Forebode not any severing of our loves!
Yet in my heart of hearts I feel your might;
I only have relinquished one delight
To live beneath your more habitual sway.
I love the Brooks which down their channels fret,
Even more than when I tripped lightly as they;
The innocent brightness of a new-born Day
Is lovely yet;
The Clouds that gather round the setting sun
Do take a sober colouring from an eye
That hath kept watch o'er man's mortality;
Another race hath been, and other palms are won.
Thanks to the human heart by which we live,
Thanks to its tenderness, its joys, and fears,
To me the meanest flower that blows can give
Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears.

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Thawing Out With Our Fluffy Tailed Friends

Today we celebrate squirrels, those everyday creatures with the fluffy tails and I have always found so entertaining. I love the way they used to nibble on pine cones propped up on their hind legs using their delicate fingers to turn the cones around and their keen ability to sniff out potential predators from neighbor cats to raccoons or even our very quick little Yorkie Bobby growing up.

When I moved to DC I couldn’t believe the varieties of colors of squirrels, yes, this sounds like a terribly naïve or contrived assessment about the diversity of creatures in DC, but it’s not meant to sound like that. I had gone to high school with people of more colors than squirrels I’d ever seen since arriving here. And I find them all very beautiful.

The other thing I love about city squirrels is their brash, in-your-face scramble for food. They have no fear of people walking by—when their eyes are on the prize, they go for it and we look on, happy for them. One day while waiting for a bus, I truly believe the scrambling pair of squirrels playing up and down the nearby tree would have no problem pushing my shoe off of the side of a discarded wrapper of some sort just so they could get a lick of whatever was on it.

Beloved and fat, fed by tourists and locals alike, today’s poem does justice to these backyard and city critters that I love to watch and have had sympathy for during the blizzard. If you think the lingering feet of snow and ensuing melt was tough for us humans, think about our furry friends who have had a deeper dig-out for sustenance than most of us.

For Squirrel Nutkin
by Nicole Speulda

Upon the porch Squirrel Girl did put
First one front paw and then a back foot,
Scampering up to the black mat
Where she nibbled and piled her cheeks fat
With nuts my mother held out just for her.

The courtship began long ago,
The then pregnant squirrel prancing to and fro,
Capturing the eye and food of my mother
Nurturing by nature, caring of others
They developed a trust, hand to fur.

This backyard jungle is fraught with peril,
Squirrels and birds watchful of cats domestic and feral
Outwitting each other for seed, nuts and berries,
For my mother’s hand each crafty creature tarries,
In a backyard that reminds me of Beatrix Potter.

The day of the standoff squirrel was caught in greed,
Hanging upside-down from in a raid on bird seed,
Her ears straightly perked, fine hairs filtering
scent and movement like miniature satellites positioning
the fat cat beneath, the birds circling her.

Then off with a swing and the help of human noise,
Squirrel Girl lived another day but would learn poise
In her gathering and beware the cats and the birds,
To wait for the kind hand outstretched to her,
And has since developed a gourmet pallet, as it were--
unsalted giant walnuts please kind madam, kind sir.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Whitman, Lincoln And The Man Who Shot Them Both


A while ago a dear friend of mine gave me a book about the interconnectedness of artists (mostly photographers and writers) from the mid 19th to 20th centuries. I have not finished it, mostly because I love lingering over each chapter which reads as a separate, but linked meeting or meetings, among a variety of innovative artists and the relationships they formed. Each of these episodes have me wanting to go back in time to be there and I’ve shaken my head in disbelief more than once in awe and jealousy, wishing I could have been in the room when…

A Chance Meeting: Intertwined Lives of American Writers and Artists is authored by Rachel Cohen and one of the things I loved immediately about this book is that it contains a hand drawn tree of connectivity for all of the once living characters who grace these pages. It’s almost like playing a literary version of the Kevin Bacon seven degrees of situation game, this time containing creative literary/artistic and political characters I would have loved to have seen. These days writers pimp their books by going on tours, artists must be self-promoters and it’s not shameful to stump for oneself, whether for your own campaign, cause or some other form of art.

Mathew Brady was, undoubtedly the most famous Civil War photographer and, arguably the pioneer of portraits. If he were alive today, he would have been the guy who invented “Senior Portraitism” and then coined that very term. Because of Brady, most middle school textbooks have accurate images of Generals Grant, Lee and Sherman as well as the mounds of bodies piled up in the aftermath of the battles waged between them, verifying, cataloguing each one with his lens. Mathew Brady’s images of those men and, perhaps the most famous man of his time, President Abraham Lincoln, made Brady the most sought after photographer by everyone and he alone captured some of the only images we have of them. The picture atop this post is Brady's taken of Walt Whitman and the book describes the way it came to be from what Whitman was wearing to how his arm was posed above his head.

There is much to learn even in a couple of chapters of this particular book about Brady’s photography and his ties with the literary world, however, perhaps counter intuitively, this first post will focus on an omission. Walt Whitman and Abraham Lincoln never met. Let me repeat that: Whitman never met Lincoln.

They knew of each other, read each other and shared the same political view and both were quite famous and contemporaries. I had it in my mind all along that the poet turned nurse turned poet-profit knew well the Lincoln of whom he goes on to write about so eloquently, so lovingly.

For any person who has read O Captain! My Captain! or When Lilacs Last In the Door-Yard Bloom’d, it seems obvious that Whitman had a personal relationship—at least spoke with—Lincoln. According to the book, not so. Instead there is a scene in which Whitman walks along a DC street, astride Lincoln’s carriage route, and he simply raises a hand and the tall man knows the fully bearded bard and acknowledges him back.

Future posts about this particular book will focus on moments when people met—the intent of the book. But I couldn’t believe that the two men who seemed to have most in common from philosophy to a way with words, not to mention their larger than life physicality (both very tall and very bearded) which made them visible celebrities in DC in a time so crucial, never met.

Am I the only one who thought this? While mulling this over on Sunday, a strange thing happened, which seems to be happening to me more often than not...an entire program regarding the Lincoln Memorial, from its controversial pre-designs to construction and even lighting aired on Studio 360. I had an eerie feeling on Sunday, while listening to the podcast that anyone reading this post would love to hear this program. Visual artists, from Mathew Brady to Henry Bacon knew how to show their subjects: Whitman was told where to put his hand, and the same thing happened when Brady shot Lincoln. There was a deliberateness in the very art that made them look strong but also as they were—Brady’s eye was the only one that mattered and his was the lens in which we see these two iconic figures.

It’s not surprising to me now, that so much was made of the making of the Lincoln Memorial. It’s one thing to take a picture of a man, it’s an entirely other lifetime to build him, to sculpt him and his face, getting his hands just so. Bacon took Brady’s photographs and built something resembling the character of the man, the words, the images of what he believed the man to be. Interestingly, Lincoln is sitting. Unlike the men on horses throughout DC in various circles, Lincoln is calm, seated and thoughtful, much in the way Whitman is photographed.

Today’s two poems are the aforementioned O Captain! My Captain! and When Lilacs Last In the Door-Yard Bloom’d. I am not posting them both (even though Lilacs is long) to wear anyone out. Rather, I loved that today I took the time to read both of them for the beauty of the language and the tribute to a political figure Whitman so ardently believed in and mourned for so heartily.

I loved reading these again a little differently than I have in the past, but that’s the beauty of poetry, you can read it over and over and find new meaning each time.  First, one of Brady's photographs of Lincoln and the Lincoln Memorial as it stands today:


 

O Captain! My Captain!

by Walt Whitman
O Captain my Captain! our fearful trip is done;
The ship has weather’d every rack, the prize we sought is won;
The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,
While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring:

But O heart! heart! heart!
O the bleeding drops of red,
Where on the deck my Captain lies,
Fallen cold and dead.

O Captain! my Captain! rise up and hear the bells;
Rise up—for you the flag is flung—for you the bugle trills;
For you bouquets and ribbon’d wreaths—for you the shores a-crowding;
For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;

Here Captain! dear father!
This arm beneath your head;
It is some dream that on the deck,
You’ve fallen cold and dead.

My Captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still;
My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will;
The ship is anchor’d safe and sound, its voyage closed and done;
From fearful trip, the victor ship, comes in with object won;

Exult, O shores, and ring, O bells!
But I, with mournful tread,
Walk the deck my Captain lies,
Fallen cold and dead.


When Lilacs Last In The Door-Yard Bloom’d
by Walt Whitman from Memories of President Lincoln
1

When lilacs last in the door-yard bloom’d,
And the great star early droop’d in the western sky in the night,
I mourn’d—and yet shall mourn with ever-returning spring.

O ever-returning spring! trinity sure to me you bring;
Lilac blooming perennial, and drooping star in the west,
And thought of him I love.

2
O powerful, western, fallen star!
O shades of night! O moody, tearful night!
O great star disappear’d! O the black murk that hides the star!
O cruel hands that hold me powerless! O helpless soul of me!
O harsh surrounding cloud, that will not free my soul!

3
In the door-yard fronting an old farm-house, near the white-wash’d palings,
Stands the lilac bush, tall-growing, with heart-shaped leaves of rich green,
With many a pointed blossom, rising, delicate, with the perfume strong I love,
With every leaf a miracle……and from this bush in the door-yard,
With delicate-color’d blossoms, and heart-shaped leaves of rich green,
A sprig, with its flower, I break.

4
In the swamp, in secluded recesses,
A shy and hidden bird is warbling a song.
Solitary, the thrush,
The hermit, withdrawn to himself, avoiding the settlements,
Sings by himself a song.

Song of the bleeding throat!
Death’s outlet song of life—(for well, dear brother, I know
If thou wast not gifted to sing, thou would’st surely die.)

5
Over the breast of the spring, the land, amid cities,
Amid lanes, and through old woods, (where lately the violets peep’d from the ground, spotting the gray debris;)
Amid the grass in the fields each side of the lanes—passing the endless grass;
Passing the yellow-spear’d wheat, every grain from its shroud in the dark-brown fields uprising;
Passing the apple-tree blows of white and pink in the orchards;
Carrying a corpse to where it shall rest in the grave,
Night and day journeys a coffin.

6
Coffin that passes through lanes and streets,
Through day and night, with the great cloud darkening the land,
With the pomp of the inloop’d flags, with the cities draped in black,
With the show of the States themselves, as of crape-veil’d women, standing,
With processions long and winding, and the flambeaus of the night,
With the countless torches lit—with the silent sea of faces, and the unbared heads,
With the waiting depot, the arriving coffin, and the sombre faces,
With dirges through the night, with the thousand voices rising strong and solemn;
With all the mournful voices of the dirges, pour’d around the coffin,
The dim-lit churches and the shuddering organs—Where amid these you journey,
With the tolling, tolling bells’ perpetual clang;
Here! coffin that slowly passes,
I give you my sprig of lilac.

7
(Nor for you, for one, alone;
Blossoms and branches green to coffins all I bring:
For fresh as the morning—thus would I carol a song for you, O sane and sacred death.

All over bouquets of roses,
O death! I cover you over with roses and early lilies;
But mostly and now the lilac that blooms the first,
Copious, I break, I break the sprigs from the bushes;
With loaded arms I come, pouring for you,
For you, and the coffins all of you, O death.)

8
O western orb, sailing the heaven!
Now I know what you must have meant, as a month since we walk’d,
As we walk’d up and down in the dark blue so mystic,
As we walk’d in silence the transparent shadowy night,
As I saw you had something to tell, as you bent to me night after night,
As you droop’d from the sky low down, as if to my side, (while the other stars all look’d on;)
As we wander’d together the solemn night, (for something, I know not what, kept me from sleep;)
As the night advanced, and I saw on the rim of the west, ere you went, how full you were of woe;
As I stood on the rising ground in the breeze, in the cold transparent night,
As I watch’d where you pass’d and was lost in the netherward black of the night,
As my soul, in its trouble, dissatisfied, sank, as where you, sad orb,
Concluded, dropt in the night, and was gone.

9
Sing on, there in the swamp!
O singer bashful and tender! I hear your notes—I hear your call;
I hear—I come presently—I understand you;
But a moment I linger—for the lustrous star has detain’d me;
The star, my departing comrade, holds and detains me.

10
O how shall I warble myself for the dead one there I loved?
And how shall I deck my song for the large sweet soul that has gone?
And what shall my perfume be, for the grave of him I love?

Sea-winds, blown from east and west,
Blown from the eastern sea, and blown from the western sea, till there on the prairies meeting:
These, and with these, and the breath of my chant,
I perfume the grave of him I love.

11
O what shall I hang on the chamber walls?
And what shall the pictures be that I hang on the walls,
To adorn the burial-house of him I love?

Pictures of growing spring, and farms, and homes,
With the Fourth-month eve at sundown, and the gray smoke lucid and bright,
With floods of the yellow gold of the gorgeous, indolent, sinking sun, burning, expanding the air;
With the fresh sweet herbage under foot, and the pale green leaves of the trees prolific;
In the distance the flowing glaze, the breast of the river, with a wind-dapple here and there;
With ranging hills on the banks, with many a line against the sky, and shadows;
And the city at hand, with dwellings so dense, and stacks of chimneys,
And all the scenes of life, and the workshops, and the workmen homeward returning.

12
Lo! body and soul! this land!
Mighty Manhattan, with spires, and the sparkling and hurrying tides, and the ships;
The varied and ample land—the South and the North in the light—Ohio’s shores, and flashing Missouri,
And ever the far-spreading prairies, cover’d with grass and corn.

Lo! the most excellent sun, so calm and haughty;
The violet and purple morn, with just-felt breezes;
The gentle, soft-born, measureless light;
The miracle, spreading, bathing all—the fulfill’d noon;
The coming eve, delicious—the welcome night, and the stars,
Over my cities shining all, enveloping man and land.

13
Sing on! sing on, you gray-brown bird!
Sing from the swamps, the recesses—pour your chant from the bushes;
Limitless out of the dusk, out of the cedars and pines.

Sing on, dearest brother—warble your reedy song;
Loud human song, with voice of uttermost woe.

O liquid, and free, and tender!
O wild and loose to my soul! O wondrous singer!
You only I hear……yet the star holds me, (but will soon depart;)
Yet the lilac, with mastering odor, holds me.

14
Now while I sat in the day, and look’d forth,
In the close of the day, with its light, and the fields of spring, and the farmer preparing his crops,
In the large unconscious scenery of my land, with its lakes and forests,
In the heavenly aerial beauty, (after the perturb’d winds, and the storms;)
Under the arching heavens of the afternoon swift passing, and the voices of children and women,
The many-moving sea-tides,—and I saw the ships how they sail’d,
And the summer approaching with richness, and the fields all busy with labor,
And the infinite separate houses, how they all went on, each with its meals and minutia of daily usages;
And the streets, how their throbbings throbb’d, and the cities pent—lo! then and there,
Falling upon them all, and among them all, enveloping me with the rest,
Appear’d the cloud, appear’d the long black trail;
And I knew Death, its thought, and the sacred knowledge of death.

15
Then with the knowledge of death as walking one side of me,
And the thought of death close-walking the other side of me,
And I in the middle, as with companions, and as holding the hands of companions,
I fled forth to the hiding receiving night, that talks not,
Down to the shores of the water, the path by the swamp in the dimness,
To the solemn shadowy cedars, and ghostly pines so still.

And the singer so shy to the rest receiv’d me;
The gray-brown bird I know, receiv’d us comrades three;
And he sang what seem’d the carol of death, and a verse for him I love.

From deep secluded recesses,
From the fragrant cedars, and the ghostly pines so still,
Came the carol of the bird.

And the charm of the carol rapt me,
As I held, as if by their hands, my comrades in the night;
And the voice of my spirit tallied the song of the bird.

16
Come, lovely and soothing Death,
Undulate round the world, serenely arriving, arriving,
In the day, in the night, to all, to each,
Sooner or later, delicate Death.

Prais’d be the fathomless universe,
For life and joy, and for objects and knowledge curious;
And for love, sweet love—But praise! praise! praise!
For the sure-enwinding arms of cool-enfolding Death.

Dark Mother, always gliding near, with soft feet,
Have none chanted for thee a chant of fullest welcome?
Then I chant it for thee—I glorify thee above all;
I bring thee a song that when thou must indeed come, come unfalteringly.

Approach, strong Deliveress!
When it is so—when thou hast taken them, I joyously sing the dead,
Lost in the loving, floating ocean of thee,
Laved in the flood of thy bliss, O Death.

From me to thee glad serenades,
Dances for thee I propose, saluting thee—adornments and feastings for thee;
And the sights of the open landscape, and the high-spread sky, are fitting,
And life and the fields, and the huge and thoughtful night.

The night, in silence, under many a star;
The ocean shore, and the husky whispering wave, whose voice I know;
And the soul turning to thee, O vast and well-veil’d Death,
And the body gratefully nestling close to thee.

Over the tree-tops I float thee a song!
Over the rising and sinking waves—over the myriad fields, and the prairies wide;
Over the dense-pack’d cities all, and the teeming wharves and ways,
I float this carol with joy, with joy to thee, O Death!

17
To the tally of my soul,
Loud and strong kept up the gray-brown bird,
With pure, deliberate notes, spreading, filling the night.

Loud in the pines and cedars dim,
Clear in the freshness moist, and the swamp-perfume;
And I with my comrades there in the night.

While my sight that was bound in my eyes unclosed,
As to long panoramas of visions.

18
I saw askant the armies;
And I saw, as in noiseless dreams, hundreds of battle-flags;
Borne through the smoke of the battles, and pierc’d with missiles, I saw them,
And carried hither and yon through the smoke, and torn and bloody;
And at last but a few shreds left on the staffs, (and all in silence,)
And the staffs all splinter’d and broken.

I saw battle-corpses, myriads of them,
And the white skeletons of young men—I saw them;
I saw the debris and debris of all the dead soldiers of the war;
But I saw they were not as was thought;
They themselves were fully at rest—they suffer’d not;
The living remain’d and suffer’d—the mother suffer’d,
And the wife and the child, and the musing comrade suffer’d,
And the armies that remain’d suffer’d.

19
Passing the visions, passing the night;
Passing, unloosing the hold of my comrades’ hands;
Passing the song of the hermit bird, and the tallying song of my soul,
(Victorious song, death’s outlet song, yet varying, ever-altering song,
As low and wailing, yet clear the notes, rising and falling, flooding the night,
Sadly sinking and fainting, as warning and warning, and yet again bursting with joy,
Covering the earth, and filling the spread of the heaven,
As that powerful psalm in the night I heard from recesses,)
Passing, I leave thee, lilac with heart-shaped leaves;
I leave thee there in the door-yard, blooming, returning with spring,
I cease from my song for thee;
From my gaze on thee in the west, fronting the west, communing with thee,
O comrade lustrous, with silver face in the night.

20
Yet each I keep, and all, retrievements out of the night;
The song, the wondrous chant of the gray-brown bird,
And the tallying chant, the echo arous’d in my soul,
With the lustrous and drooping star, with the countenance full of woe,
With the lilac tall, and its blossoms of mastering odor;
With the holders holding my hand, nearing the call of the bird,
Comrades mine, and I in the midst, and their memory ever I keep—for the dead I loved so well;
For the sweetest, wisest soul of all my days and lands…and this for his dear sake;
Lilac and star and bird, twined with the chant of my soul,
There in the fragrant pines, and the cedars dusk and dim.