The
copy of A Little Treasury of American
Poetry I borrowed from the library was tied with a dirty white ribbon and
bow, like a gift from a shabby-genteel friend. That’s almost the way I think of
its editor, Oscar Williams (1900-1964), a forgettable poet but memorable
anthologist. I bought my copy in paperback almost fifty years ago. It and
others edited by Williams (A Little Treasury
of Modern Poetry, Immortal Poems of the
English Language) served as my Introduction to Poetry. The library copy is
signed by its former owner, the literary critic and scholar Frederick J.
Hoffman, and dated July 9, 1948, the year of its publication. The cover has
detached from the binding and been repaired with white medical tape. In his
introduction, Williams intones a familiar lament:
“For
poetry should be the expression of the whole people, not a private matter.
Unfortunately, the American public, like some other modern publics, does not
care for, nor understand serious poetry. Moreover, the special audience for
poetry even among, let us say, those who have gone through college, is
incredibly small.”
One
wishes to raise his hand and ask: “And why shouldn’t it be?” Williams’
selection reflects the triumph of Modernism. He includes Pound’s “Hugh Selwyn
Mauberley” (heavily annotated by someone in pencil) and Canto I, Eliot’s The Waste
Land, and Hart Crane’s The Bridge.
A century after Modernism first stirred, and putting aside for the moment their
literary worth, these poems remain heavy going, even (perhaps especially) for “those
who have gone through college.” Such work could never be as broadly popular as that
written in the nineteenth century by Bryant, Longfellow, Lowell and Holmes,
who, in Williams’ judgment, “produced only watered-down versions of English
verse,” that was “by serious standards…second-rate.”
Williams
divides his anthology into three sections: “American Indian Poetry” (eleven
pages), “The Chief Poets from Colonial Times to the Present Day” (719 pages,
from Anne Bradstreet to Delmore Schwartz) and “Poetry of the Forties” (113
pages). Immodestly, Williams includes eight of his own poems in the
second section and five by his wife, Gene Derwood, in the third. One
sample from Williams’ “The Seesaw” will suffice:
“Divine
seesaw! Ply thy twin ways of higher!
The
valley of the grave upholds the stars.”
On
second thought, this, from “Shopping for Meat in Winter,” is too good not to
share:
“What
lewd, naked and revolting shape is this?
A
frozen oxtail in the butcher’s shop
Long
and lifeless upon the huge block of wood
On
which the ogre’s axe begins chop chop.”
I
wish I could remember my reaction to this stuff back in 1965. Did I read it
straight or suspect parody? Probably the former. I was naïve and unschooled,
and very much in thrall to what Flannery O’Connor called litachur. Even if a poem was pretentious and boring, I wouldn’t
have admitted it for fear of sounding dim and unsophisticated. Williams
the anthologist offered me the start of an education. In particular I was taken
by E.A. Robinson, Louise Bogan and W.H. Auden, as well as a poem by Karl
Shapiro, “Scyros,” that I still like but don’t claim to fully understand. Williams
did all that any decent teacher can do. He opened the book and pointed at the
page.