Tuesday, 28 August 2012

From Elegies of the Far North


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 View from Bárrás, Finnmark Fylke, Norway (II): photo by Villie Miettinnen, 4 September 2006




Who, if you cried out, would hear you in this village of the stone deaf
and eternally benumbed? Would they, to humour you
in your bewildered questionings, interrupt their rude
drinking games, their gropings in the violent dark of the cottages? and even if one
of the maids of the village, caught up in the solitude
which holds in its gentle palm the space around you at every moment of this world, her rustic

dirndl stained by the splashed droppings of the cattle she so lovingly tends, were to 
leave off early from the labours of the husky barn
and press you against her breast heart: you would be consumed
in that overwhelming existence. 



9 comments:

  1. Tom,

    O that meeting with the girl in the rustic dirndl,
    "'Tis a consummation devoutly to be wished."

    8.28

    light coming into sky above black plane
    of ridge, silver of planet above branch
    in foreground, wave sounding in channel

    more than person present in,
    “to see means to know”

    play of substance, thoughts
    in which, may be more

    silver of sunlight reflected in channel,
    wingspan of gull gilding toward horizon

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  2. Steve,

    Such fits of sublimation have we known!

    “to see means to know”

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  3. In case anyone should detect, er, faint and distant echoes, wafting over the mountaintops much as soft wisps of cloud, of the Duino Elegies...

    Well, to be fair to Rilke, the Rilke Phenomenon, like any other chamber-poet celebrity cult (we have them nowadays too of course), was not his fault. Not entirely. A lot was projected upon him. And who could say no to it?

    "In his last years, and after his death in 1926, Rilke became the dubious beneficiary of German literary criticism, a kind of writing that (with rare and honorable exceptions) was less a criticism than a celebration, intuitive in method and overblown in rhetoric, a making and staking of grandiose claims, a kind of writing mired in sensibility and pseudo-philosophical mystery-making. Rilke, as Walter Muschg has caustically but justly said, became ' the idol of a generation without men.' The publication of his letters, 'most of them written, with violet ink, to ladies,' called forth a 'herd of male and female enthusiasts -- Schwärmer und Schwärmerinnen,' until at last 'the Rilke-fever grew into a world-wide fanatical sect.'...

    "To Rilke's credit it must be said that he was the most reluctant of prophets, and when he issued warnings to his correspondents, he was not adopting the seductive pose that seeks to attract while appearing to repel; he was being faithful to his own convictions. He was besieged by letters from strangers. 'What letters!' he wrote to a friend in the summer of 1921. 'There are so many people who expect from me -- I don't know quite what -- help, advice; from me, who finds himself so perplexed before the pressing urgencies of life! And even though I know they deceive themselves, that they are mistaken -- still I feel ( and I don't think it's out of vanity!) tempted to communicate some of my experiences to them -- some fruits of my long solitude.'"

    -- Peter Gay, Weimar Culture

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  4. Focus: berries

    They didn't need
    to talk about me
    it was in their looks
    as I trudged with the rugs
    washed with goat soap
    in the icy lake
    we brought them back
    they said my legs were pretty
    I knew I should hide them
    my most useful items
    in my toolkit
    my basket woven
    of the best grasses
    twigs I could search for
    it was not enough to please them
    it would not be what I remembered
    it was the rounded loaves
    the fish baked inside
    litle roosters it was called

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  5. Jah, the village life, it is good. Maybe. Some of the time anyway. Laundry chores ease up in winter. Lake frozen. Wear same clothes all winter. Phew!

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  6. "...the space around you at every moment of this world..."

    This is somewhat of a comfort
    at a high price
    the price of freedom
    just try to break
    the routine
    just you try it

    after the war

    That's what draws me to them
    their wild scatchings
    and then they sing out
    beat hips punk da
    da they dare

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  7. "this village of the stone deaf
    and eternally benumbed"

    I know this and do not damn it.
    We are consumed together.

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  8. Susan: A less oblique response: your poems are wonderful. Stephen's, too, slivering silver of sunlight, but I was aware of Stephen's work, yours has arrived out of some pleasant blind spot. Rare to find poems in comment streams that aren't annoyances, and yours are far from that.

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  9. Whatever happens in the Far North stays in the Far North.
    Thanks so much for the compliment, Scott Keeney. It means a lot to me, plus, to meet you in this beautiful place means that these blog comments are now sacred space (although they are quite cyber) too.

    ReplyDelete