Wednesday, 15 August 2012

Edward Dorn: Dark Ceiling


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Image, Source: digital file from original neg. 

Largest lead mine in the world surrounded by dead trees. Kellogg, Idaho: photo by Arthur Rothstein, July 1936

 

Broad black scar the valley is
and sunday is
where
........in the wide arc
..the small lights of homes come on
in that trough.

......Burnish my heart
......with this mark

Furnish my soul with the hope
Far away and by a river
In the darkness of a walnut stand.

There
........is
no home, no back.

All is this wrong key, the lark
sings
......but his voice trails off
in the snow. He has not
brought his meadow.
The starling's
..insolent whistle
is the truth here -- dark smoke

drifts in from the morning fertilizer factory
and men there return lamely
to work, their disputes not settled.



Edward Dorn: Dark Ceiling, from Geography (1965)


Image, Source: digital file from original neg.

Sugar beet factory (Amalgamated Sugar Company) along Snake River. Nyssa, Malheur County, Oregon, a one factory town: photo by Dorothea Lange, October 1939

Image, Source: intermediary roll film
Sugar beet factory along Snake River. Nyssa, Malheur County, Oregon: photo by Russell Lee, November 1941

Photos from Farm Security Administration
Collection, Library of Congress

18 comments:

  1. In case anyone may be interested, at the time this poem was writ Edward Dorn was living not far from a fertilizer plant (Simplot) in Idaho.

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  2. ... and that walnut stand by a river of which he speaks would have been in rural Illinois, where he grew up.

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  3. The dark smoke is all around, I'm afraid. Unfortunately, the ones whose voices matter least in these things, at least officially, are the ones most ravaged by being choked.

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  4. Susan referred to Dorn as a poetry geographer; he knows what place (and displacement) means. Thanks for the notes, TC. I, for one, am interested.

    "There/ is/no home, no back" That's something that has to be said.

    I love the starlings' insolence. It's wonderful to watch those jewelled beasts squabbling in our city centre with that smart disdain for all the inhuman human business.

    This poem is the truth for us here.

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  5. Olympic Moments

    My father has no backbone no spine.
    He sits on the couch pressing his luck.
    During the Olympics he scratched his head
    with a wooden spoon now and then—
    grunted and complained about his pain.
    The grey cat Auden curls next to him
    wormy and adoring. He scolds Auden, shush, shush,
    the Olympics. On right now are the personal stories
    about the figure skaters. Showing the women
    beyond the rink. Beyond the clean edges
    they make with their skates.
    Past their unfortunate falls.

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  6. "There/is/no home, no back."

    These lines speak of the deep singularity of the poet searching and living in the bitter sweetness of finding and not finding, encountering and turning up items almost by accident fool/wise genius shaman who has passed the torch to his deputy in charge here. (His name is Tom Clark) What will he show us that is familiar and surprising at the same time? I think it is this here. This home here.

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  7. Ed Dorn


    A small word
    hero

    big
    worship

    get a kick
    out of it

    across the land
    scape the West

    kick the can
    horrible bucket

    right to say
    fuck it

    someone said
    the path of genius

    so lonely
    not friend

    but student
    intense

    that wanting
    waiting for

    more poetry
    responsible burdens

    terrible comfort
    to go find a poem

    make one
    even

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  8. "Burnish my heart"

    "Furnish my soul with the hope"

    Make marks
    about the Snake
    the sugar
    from the beets
    lead out of
    dry hills
    in Idaho

    dead trees surrounding
    where
    Oregon's state bird
    should be
    singing
    to the poet
    whose ears
    twist and turn
    by the sound

    spitting

    too much emotion

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  9. Blonde teens embrace
    on the minimalest porch
    caress careless
    of the passerby.

    Their sweet public necking
    marks the approaching
    end of summer,
    start of school.

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  10. "Goodbye to the Illinois"

    How would it be
    stared at for a year
    by your mother--

    what this means
    you across the field

    dullness lurking
    in all the expected
    places all around

    they said goodbye
    before you were ready

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  11. I didn't have to try too impossibly hard
    to be Teacher's Pet
    just raised my hand
    when Ed Dorn asked if anyone
    had heard of
    or even read some
    Richard Brautigan

    later I was to describe
    to everyone in class
    the definition of midden

    my voice, thawing
    it is a pile of trash
    I said
    picturing white clam shells
    piles and piles of them
    on the Oregon Coast

    and my teacher waited
    intense charisma
    in every word gesture look
    I did not have
    at the moment
    thought of Eugene
    Black Tartarian Cherry treee
    there lovingly held up
    with supports
    in the Rose Garden
    by the river
    and how Eugene
    is a great place
    to walk around
    after awhile
    you don't notice
    your wet feet

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  12. The wonderful bits about the birds to which WB draws our attention reflect a long period of looking and in-dwelling for this poet.

    Dorn was a chorological -- or to use the term of his master in the study of the morphology of landscape, the geographer Carl O. Sauer, "areal" -- writer. The lonesome or apart quality in his nature which informs his lyric voice found its always tentative, always uncertain locations in the scattered Western places through which he passed as an itinerant in his first decade as a poet. In these travels he became a self-taught person of learning, largely thanks to small town libraries (he has a fascinating essay in which he recounts "Libraries I Have Known"). One of the writers he learned to deeply admire in these years was the great naturalist W.H. Hudson. Reading Hudson when he was a struggling marginal farm laborer in Burlington, Washington in the 1950s led him to inspect the skies, to find auguries and omens in the passages of birds, an ancient poetic concentration. One of his finest prose writings, and perhaps the most poetic of all his evocations of space, is the 1958 essay , "Notes from the Fields: Skagit Valley".

    It begins:

    "The meadow larks and the crows don't exist for each other. The lark is apparently always in flight. There is no question that the meadow lark is the loveliest of flying things... What flying! The sheer exactitude of flying complexly and exhaustively, on the air, at that slight height, to the near ground..."

    Dorn's areal projections of distance in this period were often as if lifted on the wings of birds.

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  13. They whirr. And the birds remain to testify.

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  14. Living in meadow lark country the last twenty years, I appreciate. My backyard is in town, though, so I mostly see lots of vultures, all the yard birds, and occasional hawks. Bats and hummingbirds. Prairie paradise.

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  15. Tom,

    Got up yesterday to paddle in channel in the dark at 5AM before flying to New York to see Oona & new baby, something in ED's poem resonates --

    "black scar

    . . .

    There
    ........is
    no home, no back."

    8.15

    grey blackness of fog against invisible
    ridge, black shape of black pine branch
    in foreground, sound of wave in channel

    there that becomes presence
    of which it, and that

    things, by abstracting form,
    as much as “pictorial”

    grey white fog against invisible ridge,
    pelicans gliding across toward horizon

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  16. What Dorn and I shared and share...There was a Walnut Grove on the Greenview Farm, Greenview Illinois. My grandfather's favorite farm. Stands of Walnut among the ahead of their time round chicken coops. The coops lasting longer than the trees, which were "harvested" for use in making furniture. My childhood bed was made of Walnut.

    Furnish my soul with hope. There's a Walnut grove and a chicken coop in my soul.

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  17. Here's to walnut groves and exaltations of larks, then.

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  18. An exaltation, then....and now.

    Mom found the house.
    Dad, the harvest.
    Montgomery County, Maryland,
    west of Swain's Lock on the C&O Canal,
    1953-55. New transplants
    from Chester and Paoli, Pennsylvania,
    in our eastward migration, Dad's
    job search. Born in Springfield, Illinois,
    at 16 with the Illinois Central Railroad
    in Chicago, somehow he also knew black walnuts.
    At our River Road rental he found them,
    loved the smell and stain,
    fun at the fireplace hammering hard black nuts
    on a piece of rail, using ornate pickers
    to tease near perfect meats from shell
    for instant munching and Mom's recipes,
    never bettered or repeated.

    Always remembered in the woodshop where
    in my 30s and 40s I worked walnut.
    Love its smell. Moved west
    to Iowa, Dad 20 years gone.
    Got a job on a walnut farm, planting
    trees and herbs and grasses.
    Walnuts grow in my yard but I seldom
    harvest them the way some Amish do.
    Next year I might,
    if there's nothing else to do.


    The chicken coop was southeast of Pulaski
    on a semi-Amish farm
    Its owners, a married couple
    with grown children,
    had bought it from an Amish family
    who made the best blackberry pie.
    They dressed and lived and farmed
    in some ways Amish, though they weren't.
    I saw their ad in Countryside
    and drove to work as often as I could
    on their 80, working horses,
    talking Wendell Berry, Henri Nouwen and Dorothy Day,
    looking after the cows and the chickens
    for a start,
    until they upped and moved to Illinois.










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