Wednesday 5 September 2012

Robert Creeley: Generous Life


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Ella: Gerhard Richter, 2007 (private collection)



Do you remember the way we used to sing
in church when we were young
and it was fun to bring your toys with you
and play with them while all the others sung?

My mind goes on its own particular way
and leaves my apparent body on its knees
to get up and walk as far as it can
if it still wants to and as it proves still able.

Sit down, says generous life, and stay awhile!
although it's irony that sets the table
and puts the meager food on broken dishes,
pours out the rancid wine, and walks away.




Betty: Gerhard Richter, 1991 (St. Louis Art Museum)

Robert Creeley: Generous Life from Yesterdays (2002)

20 comments:

  1. Generous life
    poets notice
    wraps around color
    light like plants
    green flash idea
    just before dark.

    More than this
    generous life
    is without balance
    point being to find
    homeostasis, nicht wahr?
    Homo Sapien
    rattling around somewhere
    in a cage of bones
    always locating the heart
    with a fist here
    no there. There.

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  2. Creeley the pirate
    kite
    with lots of e's
    flying. A long
    generous tail.

    Raven chases
    down to the river
    clearly
    I picked the pears
    and set them out
    for your generous
    inspection, Creeley.
    Creeley at the river.

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  3. Old age is a strange change for the variously bent and battered bone bag whomever it may belong to...

    The opening line here keeps reminding me of a line in a well known song, which surely Bob knew:

    "Do you remember when we used to sing?"

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  4. Down by the banks
    Of Forever River

    Raven pecked
    At a pair of prickly pears

    Till he had picked
    The eye out of one

    So as to be seen
    The more clearly

    By the other in memory
    Remaining

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  5. Do you remember the way we used to dance
    Sundays
    to Jesus Christ Superstar
    Tina in charge of the album
    right before
    The Crucifixion
    Corine eating all the doughnuts


    living room
    a wide field
    knee-walking superstars
    each weekend
    left our bodies
    to that other
    solar system.

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  6. Forever River
    thanks
    for the swim there
    despite the
    No Tresspassing
    signs all around.

    Thanks for letting me
    hog the water
    stir up the fine silt
    lots of gold there
    at the bottom
    move aside salmon
    skitter away
    well no come back.

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  7. The Crow

    The crow in the cage in the dining-room
    hates me, because I will not feed him.

    And I have left nothing behind in leaving
    because I killed him.

    And because I hit him over the head with a stick
    there is nothing I laugh at.

    Sickness is the hatred of a repentance
    knowing there is nothing he wants.


    RC, from For Love, 1960

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  8. The poet
    does not play
    at poetry

    matters
    of life
    and breath

    find it
    a wild
    thing to do.

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  9. This reads a little like the shadow of Love Bade Me Welcome.

    I can hear the steady tread of Irony tapping out the punchline on the parquet floor.

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  10. Wooden Boy--
    Yes, I see and hear the dread there (of hurt?) that exists despite the "walks away" ending. A TEDIOUS expectation?

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  11. The Smell Of It And The Taste Of It

    Things won’t always be like this.
    Willows and the cracklings of the fishes winter lives.
    I’ve always known all along that the world is better
    down there in winter. Cool, silent nothingness.
    The smell of it. Clear ice cream with no flavor—
    old glass. New movements with my tongue
    like fresh raspberries. I taste the future, freedom,
    and taste my body growing. My wool sweater and cap.
    Maybe it is thirst. I taste them. They taste like sheep.
    Licorice, clay vessels, straw, moist ferns.

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  12. Tom,

    "My mind goes on its own particular way
    and leaves my apparent body on its knees. . ."

    9.5

    grey whiteness of fog against invisible
    top of ridge, motion of shadowed branch
    in foreground, wave sounding in channel

    “cloud” suggests experience
    of cloud, can “appear”

    apparent, next-to-last exit,
    what’s not being seen

    grey white fog against invisible ridge,
    cormorant flapping across toward point

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  13. "Do you remember when we used to sing?"

    I sure do and still love hearing Van sing it.

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  14. WB interesting, yes, to consider the Creeley together with this:


    Love bade me welcome. Yet my soul drew back
    Guilty of dust and sin.
    But quick-eyed Love, observing me grow slack
    From my first entrance in,
    Drew nearer to me, sweetly questioning,
    If I lacked any thing.

    A guest, I answered, worthy to be here:
    Love said, You shall be he.
    I the unkind, ungrateful? Ah my dear,
    I cannot look on thee.
    Love took my hand, and smiling did reply,
    Who made the eyes but I?

    Truth Lord, but I have marred them: let my shame
    Go where it doth deserve.
    And know you not, says Love, who bore the blame?
    My dear, then I will serve.
    You must sit down, says Love, and taste my meat:
    So I did sit and eat.


    -- George Herbert: Love (III)

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  15. ... also recalled the abundant and unmisgiving provision of Sister Life.

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  16. i heard him read this poem a decade ago to a mostly youngish audience at villanova university near philadelphia. sometimes it seems like just last week. his presence sadly missed. laughing, he commented that it was not a "very nice" poem. i think, however, it is a great poem. as i'm sure you know, it is the last poem in the last book of his - "If I Were Writing This" - published in his lifetime.

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  17. Bill, thanks for the testimony. And here he is already missed. The ironic diplomacy in "not very nice", so true to character. Remembering that in his Dictionary Sam Johnson said of "nice": "It is often used to express a culpable delicacy". And of "niceness": "Superfluous delicacy or exactness". If anyone's poems were ever firm gates against verbal superfluity, certainly RC's must be in the shortlist.

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  18. Sister Life,
    I'll have that to go, please. Somewhere I read there was a choice between The Specials and Beat Happening.

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  19. Creely was extremely generous with me in his final years. Reading at my boostore or just sitting out in the quad at Brown, laughing and talking it up and at times discussing light and shade in the poetry of tom clark. Creely taught me generosity of spirit. And again, we would laugh.

    Not five minutes before I read this, I wrote in my journal.

    I think the Old Testament was evident in my grandfather as he slept through the church services, but never any part of the service when children were involved and of course i woke him up for offering. At times moths flew from his wallet. But my grandfather lived the New Testament daily through his actions.

    again generosity of spirit...

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  20. Eddie,

    That's beautiful testimony, the wallet moths.

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