“My recovery
of impressions, after a short interval, yet with their flush a little faded,
may have been judged to involve itself with excursions of memory--memory
directed to the antecedent time--reckless almost to extravagance. But I recall
them to-day, none the less, for that value in them which ministered, at happy
moments, to an artful evasion of the actual.”
And this is
from the first poem in Dream Palace, “My Parents on Their Honeymoon: A
Snapshot,” twenty-five, four-line stanzas of blank verse:
“My father,
lying face up, takes the sun,
my mother,
nowhere visible, of course,
since it is
she who handles the box camera,
who, for the
future (this is how we looked,
this, by
implication, is who we were;
will it be
far from 1921
to those
others, years later, we become?),
must want
this picture of him for herself,
“random,
off-guard, unposed, relaxed, eyes closed,
My Young
Husband in His Silk Sailing Shirt
with Narrow
Stripes and Long Sleeves, and a Beanie
Signifying
We Are About to Sail,
“though she
may be unsure those words are apt,
doubtful her
caption will do this scene justice,
unversed as
to what cameras can do,
cannot do,
what one should expect them to do . . .”
Herbert’s
verse is difficult to excerpt. It’s like trying to dip a specific cup of water
from a river. The passage just quoted is drawn from a single sentence that
straddles seven stanzas, twenty-eight lines. He’s not an aphorist, not
conventionally “quotable.” His diction is plain, never “poetic” and certainly
not flowery.
I learned of
Morris when Counterpoint published his final collection, What Was Lost,
in 2000, the year before his death. On the cover is “Portland Place, London,
1906,” a photograph taken by Alvin Langdon Coburn. The first poem in the
collection, “House of Words,” is narrated by Henry James shortly after Coburn
had photographed him at Lamb House, in Rye. James included some of Coburn’s
prints in the New York Edition of his work (“Portland Place” shows up in James’
masterpiece, The Golden Bowl), and it was the James connection that
initially attracted me to Morris. The poet uncannily echoes James’ halting, endlessly
qualified syntax as the Master questions the life he has dedicated to words in
a nineteen-page dramatic monologue. It concludes:
“. . . a
house nonetheless, a destination,
a house
rising, imagine, word by word,
from words,
one’s words, (find the word for it, wordsman;
say, if you
can, what the years were, one’s life.)”
James and
Morris, both late in life, merge like overlaid transparencies. I have heard
from a publisher interested in assembling a collected edition of Morris’ poems. I would like to hear from anyone who knew Morris or knows his work who might
help bring such a belated project to fruition. He seems to have shunned attention during his life. I have never seen a photograph of Morris. Perhaps, posthumously, we can give his work the attention it deserves.
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