dirt roads

This week marked the birthday of writer Flannery O’Connor, who would have been 84 if she hadn’t died quite young. We all read her work in high school and college, if we studied English at all.

O’Connor’s writing swirls around in my memory along with that of Faulkner and Harper Lee as inspiration in the Southern Gothic style of misfit heroes and mislead mystics. Such is a literature of that part of America where the roads are likely to be dirt, unlit, and walked in old shoes. If she were living, she would have to answer for being an influence on my own creative defects of character. Since she has passed to realms beyond reproach, we should forgive.

She once sent a letter to friends, along with a manuscript of her novel The Violent Bear It Away. In the letter, she wrote:

“I am 100% pure sick of it. I cannot see it any longer and the only thing I can determine about it is that nobody else would have wanted to write it but me.”

I can relate.

lawrence ferlinghetti’s birthday

The fine poet, activist, and city-enlightener turned 90 on Tuesday 3.24.09. He’s still sharp, thoughtful, wise; he can still teach, is my point. As demonstration of which, The S.F. Chronicle published an interview, which I commend to you.

Here’s a nibble:

Q: Why do you prefer the term wide-open poetry to Beat poetry?

A: I never wrote ‘Beat’ poetry. Wide-open poetry refers to what Pablo Neruda told me in Cuba in 1950 at the beginning of the Fidelista revolution: Neruda said, ‘I love your wide-open poetry.’

He was either referring to the wide-ranging content of my poetry, or, in a different mode, to the poetry of the Beats. Wide-open poetry also refers to the ‘open form’ typography of a poem on the page. (A term borrowed from the gestural painting of the Abstract Expressionists.)

Q: Can writing be taught?

A: It has to be taut.

attending mystery

I was just going to post a vignette for you to read. I’m polishing it up to get it ready to submit for publication. I think it’s about ready to go. It’s got a clean shirt on, and a good hat to keep the rain of its little face. It’s awfully small – only two pages – to go out alone in the bold and verbose world, but I’ve done my best by it. All the rewriting set me to ruminating a bit, along these lines:

On a recent morning, drinking my coffee and listening to the critical whispers of my carpets, I read a very nice – meaning thoughtful and well-crafted – article in the LA Times about death. Rather, about a man who will soon see the end of his life, and whose lifelong career in thantology and suicide prevention has made him a unique subject for consideration in the matter of impending death.

I should clarify that if the perspective of this article is to be entertained, it is not this man who will see the end of his life. One’s death is experienced by others.

Here’s an excerpt from Waiting for death, alone and unafraid, Los Angeles Times:

“In death, things become mere things — the statue of Venus in the backyard, the gyotaku print in the kitchen, the Melville-inspired shadow boxes — no longer animated by memory, the story of their provenance. It is as if their atoms loosen and dissipate.

The meaning of death is loss and sadness and inevitability. On the wall above the bed, he has hung a print by Breughel that covers a crack in the plaster. Here an army of skeletons wages war against humanity, and compared to the Chagall overhead, it’s a bleak and macabre picture of the final hour that without angels or signs of salvation is unremittingly godless.”

Here’s a paradox: if death is experienced by others, and things become mere things, how is it that the things – mementos, memories – which are the legacy of our loved ones become so abjectly, enormously dear? I think the writer of that article has it backwards. Things are things until they’re all we have left. I have things that came to me from hands still warm and hands now beyond cold, and I have enough compassion for myself and those who gave them to me to know better than to call them mere.

The poet Rainer Maria Rilke wrote, “I live my life in widening circles that reach out across the world. I may not complete this last one but I give myself to it.”

What is such a widening circle? To me, it is a consciousness of compassion, and that consciousness is the function of poetry; in other words, the exploration of authentic human experience. We are all in this together.

There is a subset of authentic and universal human experience which we can call true for everyone, and which really make our emotions ring. These are the primary colors of our daily lives, the things which we carry everywhere, everyday, and which define us. They are love stripped of romance, fear free of titillation, and death devoid of pride. Also, the small moments and rare intangible things which offer consolation.

The problem for a poet who sits down with a notebook and a pen and hopes to dig in to truth is that these things are just so intangible. But then, intangible things are the poet’s brush and paint. We have to live with that. We have to stare death in the face because it is in the great commonality, and keep it right here – right here – in front of our dusty spectacles. And not blink. See the metaphor …. be the metaphor.

Does it help to be a little crazy?

Phenomenal nature shadows him wherever he goes. Clouds in the staring sky transmit to one another, by means of slow signs, incredibly detailed information regarding him. His inmost thoughts are discussed at nightfall, in manual alphabet, by darkly gesticulating trees. Pebbles or stains or sun flecks form patterns representing in some awful way messages which he must intercept. Everything is a cipher and of everything he is the theme. Some of the spies are detached observers, such are glass surfaces and still pools; others, such as coats in store windows, are prejudiced witnesses, lynchers at heart; others again (running water, storms) are hysterical to the point of insanity, have a distorted opinion of him and grotesquely misinterpret his actions. He must be always on his guard and devote every minute and module of life to the decoding of the undulation of things. The very air he exhales is indexed and filed away. [Nabokov, Signs and Symbols]

There is a line in the book A Separate Reality by Carlos Casteneda which has stuck with me since I read the book in 1986, though I’m not going to spend a chunk of my finitude trying to find it and be exact: “I have my aly, the little smoke has shown me my death with great clarity.” And The Chink from Robbins’ Cowgirls says “Ha ha ho ho and hee hee.” I say it’s a mystery.

OK, maybe I’m getting a little carried away. My point is that poetry is for saying the things that are unsayable, for naming the truth the dog would tell you if he could talk. The poet William Stafford wrote this about that:

Your good dogs, some things that they hear
they don’t really want you to know —
it’s too grim or ethereal.

And sometimes when they look in the fire
they see time going on and someone alone,
but they don’t say anything.

Mark Twain wrote, “The dreamer’s valuation of a thing lost–not another man’s–is the only standard to measure it by, and his grief for it makes it large and great and fine, and is worthy of our reverence in all cases.” And I say Amen, and if anything depends on red wheel barrows and white chickens, then everything depends on how my grandfather watered his tomatoes, how grandma smoothed a quilt on the bed.

We are attending a mystery, a continuous and ineffable transubstantiation of Being, no less than the passage of galaxies through needles’ eyes, no greater than an hour pulling weeds in the front yard by the gate. Perhaps exactly the same size as a dog’s collar or a homemade pie. And how can we sit down and try to write it? Because of something John Gardner said, “The organized and intelligent fictional dream that will eventually fill the reader’s mind begins as a largely mysterious dream in the writer’s mind.”

That is compassion, and that’s the job of the poet, isn’t it? We aim to write something beyond us, something that can’t be contained by the margins of the page. We fail. Words fail. We keep writing. And in the end, what remains is a final kindness. Which brings me to the end of my post.

Here’s that little story for you.

inner spaces

I have a longstanding interest in the writing spaces where other writers do their work. It’s not because I think one can learn a lot about people by seeing where they live and create. It’s just interesting. The work spaces of writers like Faulkner, Hemingway, and Frost are especially so.

The Guardian has a site exploring the studies of writers working today. It’s pretty cool.

Wanna see my Fortress of Solitude? Here you go.

John Updike

was one of my favorite writers. He’s dead.

The man had more than a way with words. He had an uncommon depth of insight into the dry gultches of the disaffected consciousness of a half century. And he was simply a beautiful writer.

Updike will be missed.

My favorite of his books, Toward the End of Time.

The artist brings something into the world that didn’t exist before, and he does it without destroying something else.

– John Updike, writer (1932-2009)

John McCain’s Baby Bunny BBQ

I guess I should post something on the blog, because I’m getting all these e-mails asking if I’m alright. “Kyle,” they say, “where are you? We miss your posts! Write something clever for us.”

OK, I missed about 10 days and in truth nobody noticed. So it goes. I’m just being a little facetious. Or sarcastic.

What’s the difference between facetious and sarcastic? Anybody know?

Anyone?

Bueller?

Which leads me to wonder if Ferris is a real first name. By real, I mean one ever given to a real person, rather than just to fictional Ferris in the movie.

Turns out it is a real name, though rare. And did you know that the poet Galway Kinnell has a son named Fergus? They’re both Irish names.

I’m a poet. a creative writer, and a technical writer. The latter is why I haven’t been blogging. See, the economy sucked the life out of the freelance writing & editing gig I had, working from home. So I’m grateful to have a new one, which started on Monday 9.8. I like it very much. The people are nice, and the technology is interesting.

My days this week were fully occupied, while evenings were lent to the bio-feedback essential to acclamation to a new situation; in other words, more rest.

I’m still technically freelance, a consultant, but it’s full time, on site, long term. Now I can pay the bills, which is nice. Southern California Edison won’t cast me into outer darkness. Cox Cable and Verizon won’t strip me off all connection to other sentient life.

You are all sentient, aren’t you? Self-aware? Infected by consciousness and the consciousness of consciousness? (That’s Wallace Stegner.) Sure, just like me. Let’s let each other know how that works out, alright? In the words of Garrison Keillor, Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.

and with that

Quotes for a Friday evening:

And with that a sob broke from her, and she turned her back to him again, her shoulders shaking in the exquisite evening dress by Trigère.

– Danielle Steele

I’ve had an unhappy life, thank God.

– Russell Baker

…She lives
below luck-level, never imagining some lottery
will change her load of pottery to wings.
Her only levity is patience,
the sport of truly chastened things.

– Kay Ryan, from Turtle

The Writer’s Almanac

sticky little lies

Only enemies speak the truth; friends and lovers lie endlessly, caught in the web of duty.

– Stephen King, novelist (b. 1947)

I’ve been waiting for a while to spot and post a ponderable from Stephen King. He’s one of my favorite writers, though not for the same reasons as, say, Faulkner or McCarthy. King knows how to tell a story. The pages damn near turn themselves.

Midnight’s Children Wins Third Booker

Salman Rushdie’s 1981 novel Midnight’s Children (Jonathan Cape) was recently announced winner of the Best of the Booker award, a celebratory honor given to mark the fortieth anniversary of the Man Booker Prize. Rushdie’s novel about the birth of India won the Booker Prize in 1981, and received a second honor, the Booker of Bookers, during the twenty-fifth anniversary of the award in 1993.

Poets & Writers

Salman Rushie, poster child for my long-held maxim, Nobody has the right not to be offended. I wonder if he can go outside yet, without fear of death. I hope so. Meanwhile, practicing a religion still seems to mean having the right to be offended by other people’s thoughts.

So it goes, we make what we made since the world began.