One of those
moments came to me more than ten years ago the first time I read “Red-Tailed Hawk” by Helen Pinkerton (1927-2017). I no longer remember where I found the
poem, though probably was online. Poems about the natural world that don’t dabble in nature
mysticism or nature worship are rare. This one starts in muted wonder and
admiration, true, but with the closing couplet enters a deeper realm, one with
philosophical heft. Helen notes the unseen, the invisible thermal that lifts
the hawk:
“Yet it was
real, the warm column of air–
Like being,
unrecorded, always there.”
Soon, thanks
to Cynthia Haven, I was able to write to Helen and express my gratitude for her
work, and that started an exchange that was at first formal and a little stiff
but soon relaxed into the easy give-and-take of friendship. Mostly we talked
about family and books. I remember her excitement seven or eight years ago when
she read Vasily Grossman’s Life and Fate, and her steadfast loyalty to
her former teachers at Stanford, Yvor Winters and J.V. Cunningham. Helen died on Dec. 28, 2017 at the age of ninety.
One of her daughters,
Erica Light, has shipped me a box of books from Helen’s personal library,
carrying on the family tradition of generosity. Included among the gifts are three
copies of the poetry journal La Fontana, one of which, from 1994, is a
celebration of Edgar Bowers’ seventieth birthday. The passage quoted at the top
of this post is from a prose remembrance of Bowers by the English poet Robert
Wells, who goes on:
“Here was
something unhoped-for actually in existence, and it felt as if some scarcely
acknowledged lack was being made good.”
That’s
precisely what I experienced when I discovered Helen’s work and the entrée she
gave me to the rest of the Stanford School of Poets, especially Winters,
Bowers, J.V. Cunningham, Janet Lewis (Winters’ widow and Helen’s close friend),
Turner Cassity and Charles Gullans. Here are the books Erica sent me:
Ford Madox
Ford, Parade’s End, with Helen’s pencil annotation inside the back cover
Merton M.
Sealts, Jr., Melville’s Reading (1988), with annotations
Herman
Melville, Battle-Pieces and Aspects of the War: Civil War Poems
(Prometheus
Books, 2001), with forward by James M. McPherson and heavy pencil annotations
throughout
The Spring 2007 issue of the journal Renascence, with an article by John Baxter on
Helen’s ekphrastic poems, “Bright Fictions”
How Words
See (Occasional
Works, 1988), a collection of ekphrastic poems, including one by Helen, edited
by Ann Rosener
Laurel,
Archaic, Rude: A Collection of Poems, presented to Yvor Winters on his retirement by
the Stanford English Department in 1966. (Erica notes that Helen was its unacknowledged
editor)
Doctor
Johnson’s Prayers (1945),
with an introduction by Elton Trueblood, a gift to Helen from, Erica tells me, her
old friend Walter Martin of Chimera Books
Erica also
includes, in her words, “offprints of my own two articles published while I
wrote my dissertation for the University of Michigan on the Sienese painter Matteo
di Giovanni di Bartolo (c.1430 - 1497). Back then, connoisseurship was
still taught in history of art departments, now, not so much, I understand.”
She added paperbacks
of Barbara Pym’s Excellent Women (1952) and A Woman of Means (1950)
by Peter Taylor, both old favorites. Here is a passage marked by Helen in Wells’
tribute to Bowers. She writes in pencil “E.B. & Y.W.” and might have added “H.P.”:
“I admired,
too, the balance of the poetry, the way that it rested within itself, the
conviction of meaning at the poem’s centre extending through its structure to
validate the details. It avoided the fragmentary and aspired to completeness of
expression. Perhaps this was the counterpart of its paradoxical desire for
complete consciousness, for the never-quite-to-be-known boundary between the
human and the elemental beyond which consciousness fails. In their various
ways, the poems reached out to a border where, for the living, there is nothing
to do but approach, wait, and then go back. They also articulated the
loneliness inherent in this elemental relation, the devaluing of other, lesser,
experience, and a consequent sense of being adrift, wandering.”
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