Remember
to give thanks for the forgotten writers. Most of us will enter their ranks, if
we haven’t already, because writing amounts to carving one’s initials on the
trunk of a tree. Time will heal the tree and erase the scar, and then the tree
will die. C.H. Sisson pays the compliment of attention to a poet whose name I
had never heard, Clere Parsons (1908-1931). In English Poetry 1900-1950: An Assessment (Rupert Hart-Davis, 1971) he
writes of the eighteen verses collected in Poems,
published a year after Parsons’ death: “They are no more than the thumb-nail
sketch of a possible oeuvre, but they
have a clarity and elegance which is not exactly like anyone else’s work and
that, for a young man of twenty-two or three, is notable.” Sisson cites this
poem, “Introduction”:
“MallarmĂ©
for a favour
teach
me to achieve
the
rigid gesture won only with labour
and
comparable to the ease
balance
and strength with which the ballet-dancer
sustains
her still mercurial pose in air.”
A
contemporary of Auden and MacNeice, Parsons honors a poetic forebear without
aping his style. What an ear for vowels this kid had, and he already understands
that writing a poem is work. Sisson says of the poem: “That is the work—and not
merely the sentiment—of a poet who is setting out to learn his trade as Pound
and Eliot set out. In spite of occasional archaism, as unfashionable when the verses
were written as it is now, the tone of the volume is not merely contemporary
but new.” Sisson quotes another poem, “Suburban Nation Piece,” and says of it: “The
lines sing and there is about them a quality at once airy and metallic. There
is no doubt that they emanate from a literary talent of distinction.” Coming
from Sisson, whose taste was excellent and whose critical strictures were unforgiving,
this is a powerful endorsement. He quotes another poem, “Garden Goddess,” and I
find a fourth online, “Different.” Here is the final stanza of “Garden Goddess”:
“Now
joy’s cartographer I trace
My
acres of gay and wellbeing’s land
O
my summer be music by Proust and Sisley and
With
me in the dead season, pastoral days.”
There’s
a special sadness about a gifted writer who dies before his promise is realized,
when so many mediocrities live into prolific old age. Dr. Johnson had them in
mind in The Rambler #106:
“No
place affords a more striking conviction of the vanity of human hopes than a
public library; for who can see the wall crowded on every side by mighty
volumes, the works of laborious meditations and accurate inquiry, now scarcely
known but by the catalogue . . .”
I read John Wain's excellent biography many years ago. For any interested readers, a fine essay by John Wain about C.S. Lewis is included in Joseph Epstein's book, Masters: Portraits of Great Teachers.
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