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Polaroid photo by Edward McKuen, August 2002 ©2002 by Stanyan Music Group. All rights reserved.

A Thought for Today

Every day I try to make a few more of my private parts public, while struggling to make the more public ones private.

 

SEPTEMBER 17 1998: IMAGINATION & ILLUMINATION

Today is the 119th Anniversary of the birth of william carlos williams, the great and individual American poet. What follows is a Flight Plan I wrote in 1998 to celebrate this great influence and finally friend in my life.

SOME THOUGHTS ON A PERSONAL HERO

william carlos williams (he preferred that his name appear in lower case) is one of our greatest American writers. His body of work and his interests in writing encompass nearly every literary form extant. He wrote four full-length plays, the libretto for an opera, four novels, 54 short stories, an autobiography, a biography of his mother, a book of essays and criticism, a history of America and even translated a medieval Spanish novel. He spent the better part of three decades composing his epic five-volume poem Patterson, and in addition he wrote 600 poems of such excellence it is hard to believe that writing was an avocation not his major life work.

For forty-two years he was a country doctor in the small town of Rutherford, New Jersey, specializing in paediatric and obstetric medicine. He gave the major part of his life to medical practice and nearly all of his writing was done after midnight, or early morning before going to his office, and in his office between appointments with patients. Even after retiring as a doctor, with more time to write, he studied and kept up with medicine. He had to snatch and grab every moment he could to set down a breathtaking body of work that would embarrass many full time writers. All of his writing was good, solid and inventive. Like Walt Whitman and Langston Hughes he was much taken with American speech. W.H. Auden called his "Asphodel, The Greeny Flower "one of the most beautiful love poems in the language.

During his lifetime williams won nearly every important literary award his country had to offer. including The Pulitzer Prize.. williams, Whitman and Walter Benton are the first poets I ever read and I was and still am much influenced by each of them. I first met williams in the early 1950s when I was in army training at Fort Slocum, New York. I called him from the base [his number was in the telephone directory]; told him I had a weekend pass and would love to meet him. "Come along," he said and I did.

williams had always been a supporter of poetry and young poets, a good thing since I hadn't even published my first book yet. I had completed the manuscript though and it was about to be published by a vanity press. I took it along to show him. He beamed when he saw that all the poems were printed in lower case with the barest of punctuation, a style he used in writing most of his own poetry and one the kid in front of him that day had unabashedly borrowed. We agreed that the less emphasis one placed on punctuation the more ways there were for the reader to interpret the work.

He told me "The poem will always be your experience but the reader will bring his imagination to it too. All we have is the language and our greatness is what we bring to it." Heady advice for a 20 year old.

I griped about not having enough time to write now that I was a G. I. and about to go overseas. He replied, "You will find the time." He said he liked my poetry and told me that my style (at that time it was more his style than mine) would serve me well. He singled out for particular praise an entry simply entitled July 11. "This is good," he said, "a love poem with original metaphors. One that is erotic without hitting you over the head with stale wording." I memorized the words and exactly how he said them. We talked about the fact that my first book would be a 'paid for' venture. "Do it," he said, "Get published any way and everywhere you can. The world thinks it doesn't need poetry, but we are the most important soldiers in the land." He was expanding to me on one of the poems he wrote that contained these lines:

                           "It is difficult
                            to get the news from poems
                            yet men die miserably every day
                            for lack
                            of what is found there".

As we shook hands again, when it was time for me to catch my ride back to base, he kindly told me "You will be an important poet, because you are an original." As I was going down the hill he yelled after me, "I'll be seeing you, I know I will, don’t forget to send me a book." williams died in 1963 after a series of strokes that stilled his mind and hand. The freedom of being a poet without having to be a versifier is a legacy he fought for all his life. The more awards he won as his fame and the power of his poetry grew, the more the big shot poets of his time put him down. Stevens, Eliot and even his former college chum Ezra Pound criticized him for his lack of meter and rhyme. Surely it was the jealousy of a club that fiercely guarded each other that caused the attacks. william carlos williams created his own meter and rhyme scheme and that's what inspired so many of us who came after him to do the same.

williams genuinely loved writing and medicine in equal measure. Not only did he lead a life of 'quiet desperation'; time after time he writes of retreating into his imagination when schizophrenia from a personal life that was a mess and the torment of writing itself overtook him.

Webster Schott, in his fine and perceptive introduction to "Imaginations", a 1970 compendium of williams' work wrote "he retreated to the senses and found a piece of freedom through his imagination. To williams the ability to imagine became the ability to survive. It was a need as urgent as sexual hunger." To this he adds the poet’s own words, "The imagination will not down . . .If it is not a dance, a song, it becomes a protest. If it is not flamboyance it becomes deformity; If it is not art, it becomes crime. Men and women cannot be content any more than children with the mere facts of humdrum life - the imagination must adorn and exaggerate life, must give it splendor and grotesqueness, beauty and infinite life."

william carlos williams gave us illumination through his imagination. For me, add inspiration. Without a winter afternoon spent in the company of one of my great literary heroes I might not have had the courage and tenacity to pursue that most difficult but ultimately rewarding life, writing.

There is an excellent web site devoted to william carlos williams, I urge you to visit it. This man could not be more my father or grandfather if he were blood kin. The book my idol had critiqued was " . . . and autumn came", today's poems are taken from it.

First Published 9/16/98

Don’t forget to join Webmaster Ken tomorrow for his weekly This One Does It For Me feature. Sleep warm.

RM 9/16/02 5:15 PM PST

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FOUR POEMS FROM
"... and autumn came"

1.
september 10


september tenth . . . the year starts home.
morning broke clear today
no fog . . . no rain
only a clear cold september morning

it’s autumn all right
you can feel it
with the taste of summer still in your mouth
my lungs breathe autumn

the year goes back from where it came
like a battered kite being brought in
like a watch spring unwinding
like children to houses
when darkness comes

now night hovers
and madrigals begin again.

2.
september 22


life is an animated cartoon

the young are born awake
live for a while
then know sleep

the march season starts quietly
lives wickedly
then gives way to april

the world’s promises go back from where they came.
miss america becomes an old maid
college boys peddle pencils

a bird calls... someone is born
a bell rings... somebody dies

life is a play by shakespeare
sub-plot by shaw
a comedy drama
directed by man
produced by christ

a bell rings
and somebody dies

3.
september 23


1.

from my window I see the world
light and shadow
illusion and dreams
love
and hope
and more dreams.

a church spire jets into the sky
and little girls in patent leather shoes
chew bubble gum in the first pew

a stranger walks into a bar
and nobody looks from a passing car

two lovers kiss in the shadow of the lake
and look around
to see if the world is watching

a girl
husbandless
loverless
walks the streets
content with a profession that gives her both

2.

and
the world is full of people like me
star-crossed
muttering prayers under their breath
clutching anything close
when disaster threatens

the world is full of lovers
lying to themselves
people praying publicly
shouting their woes
that all may hear and pity them

how impressed we are with each other’s nakedness
how public the world is
like a railroad station

i see so many like myself
the world
is my window
and in the people that walk by
i see my own reflection

4.
september 24


why was I alone last night
i know so many people
and yet among them
not a lover
or a special friend
why was I alone

what leprechaun or genie has put a spell on me
who has said don’t touch
why am I bewitched
why was I alone last night

soft from among the shadows love will come
quiet from within a dream will come peace
slowly from the night contentment

but . . . when

- from " . . . and autumn came ", 1954, 1969

 
© 1954, 1969, 1998, 2002 by Stanyan Music Group & Rod McKuen. All Rights Reserved
Birthday research by Wade Alexander o Poetry from the collection of Jay Hagan o Coordinated by Melinda Smith o Sound & Fury Dr. Eric Yeager o Webmaster Ken Blackie
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