19 March 2020
Jesse Glass asked me
to explicate a poem (he calls them “squares”) from I Want to
Write an Honest Sentence. The
poem is on page 17, dated 31 October 2017. These prose poems are
often an aid to my memory: something happened on this date, which then caused me to remember other things. But this poem required me to do
some research of my own, as I couldn't remember what had been in the news that week, and hence in the poem. Here are a few of our exchanges this past
weekend:
Sun
11:25 PM
Hello Susan, I hate
to bother you again, but I'm finishing up and including your square
poem on page 17 . . . I notice what appear to be several topics
mixed together--money laundering, Filipina maids. Range Rovers, wave
patterns, dead reefs, two women adrift without a cell phone, scarlet
yarn from a chicken's entrails--why do you call that yarn?--Virginia
mansions--a very powerful section about killing 'them'--tender
buttons--yes--more climate change--and someone driving away in a
Range Rover with a smile. Then end it with a date--Halloween 2017.
That's lots of territory to cover in one poem.
You know that
terrible letter from Harriet Monroe to Hart Crane about his Melville
poem, and Crane's sad letter in which he tries to explain his process
and what each symbol means. I don't want you to do that, but I would
like to get an insight into how you wrote this poem. Where, for
instance, did the Filipina maids come from?
Jess
P.S.--Do you harvest
the newspaper? I do that--have done that with the Japan Times.
Mon 9:07 AM
Just saw this,
Jess. Let me have a look and see if I can remember some of that!
OK, Halloween poem.
I just did some research on it myself (!) and found that this was
the money laundering scheme:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2017/10/30/the-paul-manafort-and-rick-gates-indictment-annotated/
As for the rest of
it: "Room after room," not sure of the exact reference,
but Waikiki is full of Filipina maids, one of whom I recall was very
sweet to my late dad when he got terrible sunburn back in 1991. The
two women lost on a boat were here in HI. I think that, too, may
have been a scam, but I'll have to look that up, too. Bryant seems
to remember that the lost at sea story was a fraud. Chicken entrails
simply looked like yarn to me. The Virginia mansions refer to the
AOL mini-mansions built in the 90s. I remember a taxi ride from
Dulles where the taxi driver talked about how empty the huge houses
were. "The flag of our disposition" is from "Song of
Myself." And the deposition given us by the Trump
administration. The gunman who didn't get into a good school
(according to one article I read) was the guy in Vegas who shot over
50 people. One of my students was at that concert and had to run for
his life, which comes up in other of the poems. He's sent his
girlfriend back to the Philippines (more hotels and Filipinas). I
think the perp drove a Range Rover and had returned to his house one
night before going to the hotel to shoot people. And someone caught
a photo of his face through the window of the vehicle. Does this
help? I dunno, it jars my memory when it does. Otherwise, some small
mysteries in there.
I don't harvest
newspapers, per se, but news does emerge in my writing from the day
or the week or the month I'm writing. So maybe that a good term.
This came after the
poem, but the story seemed fishy at the time, Bryant remembers:
https://www.today.com/news/two-women-rescued-navy-defend-their-story-being-lost-sea-t118536
This came just
before the poem, so it did seem fishy rather instantly:
https://fox6now.com/2017/10/31/women-lost-at-sea-rescued-by-navy-defend-their-account-of-the-ordeal/
I remember Bill
Lavender saying that the most obscure poems are those that contain
contemporary references. Now I see how that works. Thanks again for
reading and thinking about all this, Jesse. Hope you're safe from the
epizoodic.
I'll now keep going here, for my blog, which is again for Jesse, and for anyone who happens upon it.
As
I ponder Bill Lavender’s dictum about obscurity, I begin
to think of my poems/cards/squares as being about the very process of the
public becoming private. There’s a lot of contemporary history in
the square, but it needs to be unpacked, not in the way you’d
unpack a Hart Crane poem (through deep listening to the lexicon and
to metaphor) but via Google, diving into the week’s (wreck's) news. The process
throughout is one of starting from the public moment (corrupt members of the
government; shooter in Vegas), then quickly absorbing each detail into
a private flow of associations. History becomes memory becomes a
temporal space that is utterly private. Written down and then
read—even by the author myself—involves
exhuming the historical context, then combining it with personal
memories. Many of those
memories combine history (the AOL bubble of the 90s) with memory (the
taxi ride from Dulles Airport to my mother’s house in McLean,
Virginia).
There
are a couple of valences to this movement from public to private. The
first is spooky, mirroring the ways in which we all now
absorb the public into ourselves via cable television. It’s as if
we took a horror movie into ourselves and then replayed it
constantly, because we have Netflix and didn't need to go to a theater with other people (however few). This movement is away from
community, from sharing. Someone I knew in high school wrote a moving
essay about the way the television held everyone together after
Robert F. Kennedy died. She alternated between his death, the
train that carried him across the country and the television that her
family was watching. That assassination played its part in the chaos
of the time, but the reporting was still narrative; it was
still something we watched together. The poem of that event might
have been narrative. After all, Stein was dead and the Language poets
weren’t yet writing.
We
live in the terrible interiority of the outside. And now, hunkering
down in our houses, we shut out everything except what’s televised
or streaming on the internet (except for blessed dog walks at
least twice a day). We have privatized public feeling. This is the
reverse of the Commons, a re-territorializing of the self into states
of quo that are always inevitably separate from one another. No
wonder I’m thinking more about my parents these days. My father’s
simple kindnesses, which seemed naive to me as a younger person, now
feel visionary—a means to get out of this trap, perhaps.
Bryant
and I watched the first installment of the Icelandic television show
Trapped last night. It was
recommended to me by fellow Ashberyan, John Emil Vincent, a dear
friend I’ve never met (ah, the virtual sphere can be kind, as
well). As the segment ended, one child says to another that they’re
all trapped, they and the murderer who has been set loose from the
Danish ferry, if indeed he is the murderer. The
pandemic is a trap that sprung on us. The solitude it imposes is
partly mitigated by the digital world, but insufficiently so. We
are forced to hide from one another, and hence to become better
acquainted with ourselves.
At
the end of the “square” dated on Halloween, 2017, the image of
the mass shooter in Las Vegas returns: “He’s driven off, face
hidden by a sun visor, though one angle shows him smiling.” He sits
inside his Range Rover, having left his condo for the hotel room
where his armaments are laid out to be used on concert-goers below.
His movement is ever more toward interiority, but also outward toward mass
murder. This is not to equate those two things, but to show how this
radical new interiority of the outside can be a form of
violence, can inspire violence. It’s trauma, though we also try hard to
internalize the video of a fawn with her head resting on the stomach
of a German shepherd that rescued her. Split the screen, rapidly
shifting your eyes from suffering to cuteness. Cuteness may be
one way to save ourselves, since it comes of arbitrary and unexpected
kindnesses. Hello Kitty may be the cult we're seeking. (I think I'm joking here.)
My
newest poetic meditation (27) ends this way, in relation to Magda Szabo’s
amazing novel, The Door:
“The writer had no time to
save the savior. The protagonist died on her way from the bed to the
door. Remember, the poet advises, that suffering is your door. No
angle will save you.” I had
just thought through the Vegas massacre poem, which ends with the one
angle that shows the shooter smiling before his act. This meditation
written later the same day also ends with an “angle,” which might
be either the size of the crack when the door opens, or an angel. Or
it could be both, the angel that arrives when you begin to open the
door. Terrance Hayes writes about the way suffering is a door. My
students thought hard on that. It’s an opening, at least until it
closes us shut. Back into the dark room of an earlier decade, before
the genocide, when things seemed to make sense. Forward into the dust
that room has become.
At
this point in the week (it’s now Thursday) that everything is
closing down against pandemic, the door that opens on our suffering is now closing
against it. Or so we hope. It may only mean that our suffering
becomes more private, as out of a global crisis we each internalize a
pain too enormous to bear. But let’s remember that doors have the
capacity to open, even when they’re nailed shut. That a door, too, can
turn to dust.
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