Warning

Once a place for articles I wrote that failed to get published,
this blog is becoming something else.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Jeffers Poem

The Yevtushenko poem brought to mind this Jeffers poem. I've always loved its title. And I like that the speaker seems to win the argument with himself. I love the accusation "It is certain you have loved the beauty of storm disproportionately." The poem is from the 1930s, but surely like Jeffers' "present time," ours can seem as if it is "founded on violence" as well.

Self-Criticism in February
by Robinson Jeffers

The bay is not blue but sombre yellow
With wrack from the battered valley, it is speckled with violent foam heads
And tiger-striped with long lovely storm-shadows.
You love this better than the other mask; better eyes than yours
Would feel the equal beauty of the blue.
It is certain you have loved the beauty of storm disproportionately.
But the present time is not pastoral, but founded
On violence, pointed for more massive violence: perhaps it is not
Perversity but need that perceives the storm-beauty.
Well, bite on this: your poems are too full of ghosts and demons,
And people like phantoms -- how often life's are --
And passion so strained that the clay mouths go praying for destruction --
Alas, it is not unusual in life;
To every soul at some time. But why insist on it? And now
For the worst fault: you have never mistaken
Demon nor passion nor idealism for the real God.
Then what is most disliked in those verses
Remains most true. Unfortunately. If only you could sing
That God is love, or perhaps that social
Justice will prevail. I can tell lies in prose.

Friday, March 23, 2012

Yevtushenko Poem

This poem feels right, despite the fact that it seems to preach against everything every therapist I've ever had has tried to tell me. I love "It takes real talent not to dread being terrified/ by your own agonizing lack of talent." And "Indispensable is the cowardice to be cruel/and the observation of small mercies..." And, of course, the phrase, "unprince yourself."

Disbelief in Yourself is Indispensable
by Yevgeny Yevtushenko

While you're alive it's shameful to worm your way into
                                                                            the Calendar of Saints.
Disbelief in yourself is more saintly.
It takes real talent not to dread being terrified
by your own agonizing lack of talent.

Disbelief in yourself is indispensable.
Indispensable to us is the loneliness
                                                   of being gripped in the vise,
so that the darkest night sky will enter you
and skin your temples with the stars,
so that streetcars will crash into the room,
wheels cutting across your face,
so the dangling rope, terrible and alive,
will float into the room and dance invitingly in the air.

Indispensable is any mangy ghost
in tattered, overplayed stage rags,
and if even the shots are capricious,
I swear, they are no more capricious than those who are alive.

Indispensable amidst babbling boredom
are the deadly fear of uttering the right words
and the fear of shaving, because across your cheekbone
graveyard grass already grows.

It is indispensable to be sleeplessly delirious,
to fail, to leap into emptiness.
Probably, only in despair is it possible
to speak all the truth to this age.

It is indispensable, after throwing out dirty drafts,
to explode yourself and crawl before ridicule,
to reassemble your shattered hands
from fingers that rolled under the dresser.

Indispensable is the cowardice to be cruel
and the observation of the small mercies,
when a step toward falsely high goals
makes the trampled stars squeal out.

It's indispensable, with a misfit's hunger,
to gnaw a verb right down to the bone.
Only one who is by nature from the naked poor
is neither naked nor poor before fastidious eternity.

And if from out the dirt,
                                  you have become a prince,
                                                                          but without principles,
unprince yourself and consider
how much less dirt there was before
when you were in the real, pure dirt.
Our self-esteem is such baseness...
The Creator raises to the heights
only those who, even with tiny movements,
tremble with the fear of uncertainty.

Better to cut open your veins with a can opener,
to like like a wino on a spit-spattered bench in the park,
than to come to that very comfortable belief
in your own special significance.

Blessed is the madcap artist,
who smashes his sculpture with relish --
hungry and cold -- but free
from degrading belief in himself.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Messengers

He said, “God is the light of day.”
Then what's the dark of night?
He said God is: the bright white wine
and the inky red that stains
the enormous void we bear
and the thing we bear it in
all we do not know and how we know it.
Tell him my mind flutters and flits
over a flaming field in mid-summer.
That deadens the soul.
There is no chance of rain
and the sun is set to remain
remote for years without dying.
Nothing will change, not direction
nor this weak weakening effort to alight
in shaded safety. Tell him this then,
approximately where I can be found,
on a field aflame in dead summer unable to land.
                                                             - J. O'Brien