“Nothing is promised. That is the bargain.”
In a high-school creative
writing class, our teacher required us to write every day in a journal. I kept
mine in my regular loose-leaf school binder. Periodically we turned them in and
Miss Murphy, mostly so she knew we were dutifully completing the assignment,
would collect them, read our daily passages and occasionally comment. She must
have been a paragon of tact, reading all that teenage maundering.
I burned the journal long
ago but I remember intentionally not treating it with the banality of a diary. Once I included
a short story I had written based on something in The Fixer by Bernard
Malmud. I commented on current affairs (1968 offered plenty of grist). I wrote
a poem about Jan Palach and one about Martin Luther King Jr. after his assassination.
I remember commenting on passages from Eric Hoffer’s newspaper column and I
wrote the lyrics to a song based on Dylan’s “Desolation Row.”
The lasting impact of this
assignment, which stretched across my junior and senior years, was to get me in
the habit of writing every day. I resisted the gravitational pull of
solipsism and wouldn't let the desire to produce a daily masterpiece leave me paralyzed.
This apprenticeship came in handy a few years later when I got my first job as
a newspaper reporter. Editors don’t want to hear about your lack of inspiration.
I already had a built-in sense of deadline.
I thought of these things
while reading Robin Saikia’s poem “Larkin’s Typewriter.” Mike Juster introduced me to a poet previously unknown to me. Saikia describes the fallow period Larkin
experienced in the final years of his life:
“Dawn breaks on the
workhorse Olivetti.
What secrets can its
sworn-at ribbon tell
Of muse-deserted years?
The kettle clicks,
The curtains lift on Hull,
unchanged, unlit.
A bicycle ticks cooling in
the hall.
“He trusts the desk, the
hour, the body’s drag
Toward duty. Poems come,
or do not come.
One learns to keep one’s
temper with the void,
To praise the silence for
its accuracy.
“Outside, the trains
rehearse departures.
Inside, the page resists,
as it should.
Nothing is promised. That
is the bargain.
Still, something like
truth gets hammered out.
By lunchtime, even doubt
has earned its keep.”
In his 2014 biography of Larkin, James Booth writes:
“His life was a success. . . . On the personal level he
knew that he had the love and respect of those around him. His day-to-day life
was packed with affections and epiphanies. And he gained the profoundest
satisfaction from writing his poetry. He was, nevertheless, haunted by failure.
. . . Towards the end, after his poetic inspiration had died, his despairing
moods became more frequent. He told Andrew Motion: ‘I used to believe that I
should perfect the work and life could fuck itself. Now I’m not doing anything,
all I’ve got is a fucked up life.’”