I
could occupy a guilty afternoon compiling the names of writers I should have
thanked. We take them for granted and they seem so
remote and we are so unworthy, and all of the other lazy rationalizations you
care to assemble. Of course, the sincerest way to express gratitude for a
writer is to read him. That’s applied
criticism. Take it the next step in this digital age of accessibility and thank
the writers whose labors fulfill Dr. Johnson’s stringent prescription: “The
only end of writing is to enable the readers better to enjoy life, or better to
endure it.”
My
review of X.J. Kennedy’s new collection, That
Swing: Poems, 2008–2016 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2017), will be published
later this month in the Los Angeles
Review of Books. Kennedy turns eighty-seven in August. I don’t have his
address but my review is another sort of birthday card. Kennedy’s first
collection, Nude Descending a Staircase,
was published in 1961, and I started reading him a few years later. How many
living writers can you name who have supplied enjoyment and the strength to endure
for half a century?
I
thanked Guy Davenport, in person and in writing. The best of his essays still
keep me going. Davenport himself was dutiful at thanking writers who pleased
him. You might not expect the arch-guardian of the Modernist legacy to find
kind words for J.V. Cunningham, but Davenport’s tastes were more elastic than
his devotion to Ezra Pound suggests. He said Cunningham’s poems were “as well
made as wristwatches.” In turn, X.J. Kennedy wrote “A Terse Elegy for J.V. Cunningham,”
which concludes:
“May
one day eyes unborn wake to esteem
His
steady, baleful, solitary gleam.
Poets
may come whose work more quickly strikes
Love,
and yet—ah, who'll live to see his likes?”
[The
lines quoted at the top are from E.A. Robinson’s “An Old Story.”]
1 comment:
Well, to start out: Thank you, Mr. Kurp. I enjoy reading your blog immensely. What's more, you add names and titles to my reading list at quite a rapid-fire rate. I don't think I'll ever catch up to all of them, but thank you all the same. Your blog is a daily treat.
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