Showing posts with label Stanley Kunitz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stanley Kunitz. Show all posts

Sunday, June 16, 2013

To, From and About Dads



A reposting of poems collected in 2011 re: fathers, on Salamander Cove :



Sons and Fathers – Brighton Beach

In the palm of his hand
I tried to be perfect and I was. My two sandled feet
the width of his one great hand – my soles rooted
to his life line, mound of Venus, mound of Mars.
Held high, an acrobat stunt, or an offering to the Gods,
I was not afraid of him but perfect in his hand, face, smile -
our same curly hair -
my baby coat buttoned high with one round collar scalloping
my fat cheek. I grew and he had to use two hands
to keep me – one foot in each hand – his balance was my balance.
I grew and he used his feet on my hip bones
to suspend me above him.
I grew and his hand supported my back to push me forward.
I grew and he placed his hands on my shoulders to slow me down.

We have the same ears but it was his brown eyes that held me
brought joy, sorrow, sharpness and obsidian anger. Taller, I grew,
still trying to be approved, to be perfect, always wanting

to be held high again held that sacred again
but I know
if I stood on his hands now
I would crush him.

~ ~ Suzanne S. Rancourt

From Muddy River Review Issue #3 (Fall, 2010).  




"Father and Son"
Photo by Rosemarie Hayes of LifeUnfoldsPhotography

Today's Lesson

I do not have much
of my father left:
a hat, a coat, and some gloves.

They are not him though.
They belonged to him;
they have learned his shape by rote

(tried and true is best)
so when I wear them
I can feel him again and

again. Again, that
is the key word here.
And it should not be a verb.

~ ~ Jim Murdoch

Published in  This Is Not About What You Think   (Fandango Virtual, 2010).  

Candid

When I saw
the photo of myself
I squirmed
for only a moment
then looked straight at it.

I saw a gray man
with a crooked smile,
my father’s face looking back at me,
sporting a half-mouth grin
I’d only ever seen in one photograph
from Korea, green before first combat
in his uniform,
his whole platoon around him,
his hair short, his eyes bright,
nine years before my birth.

In the picture he’s smirking
as if he knew even then
that his son would someday come
to a similar moment of recognition
and amused resignation,
a moment of humor
before a terrifying future,
that my face
would inevitably become his
in spite of all my years of being certain
that if I just kept my head down
and did everything he never did,
I could keep such a thing
from ever happening.

I wonder if he knew
that it would take this long.

Monday, May 9, 2011

What makes the engine go ... longing for the dance



                                              TOUCH ME

                                             Summer is late, my heart.
                                             Words plucked out of the air
                                             some forty years ago
                                             when I was wild with love
                                             and torn almost in two
                                             scatter like leaves this night
                                             of whistling wind and rain.
                                             It is my heart that's late,
                                             it is my song that's flown.
                                             Outdoors all afternoon
                                             under a gunmetal sky
                                             staking my garden down,
                                             I kneeled to the crickets trilling
                                             underfoot as if about
                                             to burst from their crusty shells;
                                             and like a child again
                                             marveled to hear so clear
                                             and brave a music pour
                                             from such a small machine.
                                             What makes the engine go?
                                             Desire, desire, desire.
                                             The longing for the dance
                                             stirs in the buried life.                                     
                                             One season only, and it's done.
                                             So let the battered old willow   
                                             thrash against the windowpanes
                                             and the house timbers creak.        
                                             Darling, do you remember
                                             the man you married?  Touch me,
                                             remind me who I am.


In an interview in in The Brooklyn Rail (July/August 2005), as he was approaching his 100th year,  poet Stanley Kunitz was asked if he could live forever would he translate poems into every language--and if so, what would make it worth it?   Kunitz replied:  "All those poems!!"

[Photo by Matt Valentine, with permission.]
In the interview, poet/translator Farnoosh Fathi spoke with Kunitz and his literary assistant, poet Genine Lentine, about his life-long devotion to poetry.  Kunitz had a full life as a poet, editor, teacher, activist and leader, and he loved working in his garden.

 How many of us could hope to live to the age of 100 (or might even want to)?  Is the writing of poetry a lifelong thing? or does the flame die out for some, somewhere along the years, the interest and passion periodically waning, the presence of the muse no longer felt?

Do the poems one pens in one's youth speak more honestly than those brought forth in later years; is there a common theme one keeps going back to, again and again?  Do we promote or eschew the poetry of our time, wearily succumbing, passionately resisting--or simply not caring one way or the other? 
                                                                                                  
The poetry we write will outlive us, but only comes to life again when read, or spoken, spread, or thought about.  Like flowers in a garden, some words need replanting to ensure visibility;  others seem to arrive of themselves, in unlikely corners, waiting for someone to notice.  Finding these gems may be not so much a case of where we look but that we look--it's as if life in all its absurdities still succeeds in pulling us towards its poetic 'dance'--in nature, in song, and in words.

When you look back on a lifetime and think of what has been given to the world by your presence, your fugitive presence, inevitably you have to think of your art, whatever it may be, as the gift you have made to the world in acknowledgement of the gift you have been given, which is the life itself. And I think the world tends to forget that this is the ultimate significance of the body of work each artist produces. It is not an expression of the desire for praise or recognition, or prizes, but the deepest manifestation of your gratitude for the gift of life. 

                   ~ ~ Stanley Kunitz  [The Wild Braid, W.W. Norton, 2005]


Some other quotes of Stanley Kunitz, particularly helpful for poets or writers:

"You must be careful not to deprive the poem of its wild origin."

"In my darkest night, when the moon was covered and I roamed through wreckage, a nimbus-clouded voice directed me: 'Live in the layers, not on the litter.'  Though I lack the art to decipher it, no doubt the next chapter in my book of transformations is already written. I am not done with my changes."

"Be what you are. Give what is yours to give. Have style. Dare."

(Interesting reflection:  One's life as a "book of transformation"; poetry as a testament to what changes in us, what remains the same, and how and why we're driven to express it.  

Thanks, Stanley.  Your poems, like the perennials in my garden ... still erupting, still singing life.