We can divide our species into cullers and accumulators. Neither group understands the other. The former judges the latter greedy, lazy or neurotic. The latter thinks the cullers are the neurotic ones. Be honest: When you visit an accumulator’s habitat -- home or desk – don't you at first feel pity? How can he let this happen? How can he get anything done? But then uneasiness creeps in. Might this chaos mirror some riotous inner state? In turn, accumulators look at a culler’s surroundings and see poverty – of assets? of imagination? – threatening in its monastic plainness.
I’ve probably given away
my proclivity. I weigh the worth of every possession and throw out, give away or
sell what has outlived its usefulness. Too much stuff makes me itchy. I enjoy
deleting emails and hauling the glut of lockdown-generated cardboard boxes to
the recycling station. I
even try to keep my prose uncluttered, fat-free and tight. I have a neighbor, a
good friend, who owns two Harley-Davidsons. I’ve never seen either because both
are concealed in his garage by a ceiling-to-floor wall of tools, lumber,
paint cans and discarded furniture. I confide this so you understand: Yes,
cullers and accumulators can happily coexist.
In About the Size of It
(Anvil Press, 2007), his final book of poems, the late Tom Disch includes a sixty-six-line poem
celebrating manic accumulation. Naturally, “Inventory” couldn’t be a haiku.
Sorry to say, it seems not to be available online. Here are the opening lines:
“Crammed ever tighter,
stacked ever higher,
all jammed together, the
artifacts
Of fifty years agglomerate
in cupboards,
closets, cartons, drawers
and shelves
Until one final fatal
freebie triggers
the avalanche and the
levee fails.”
Disch slowly unwinds the
comic ridiculousness of metastasizing stuff without delivering another tired sermon on the perils of consumerism:
“. . . stacks of paperbacks
ascend on both sides of
the toasters
And form a bridge to the
ziggurat of stereo
components where a hoard
of extras –
White elephants, senile
Walkmen, silly
69¢ tshotchkes, unsprung
windups –
Re-enact Griffith’s Intolerance
. . .”
Disch accumulates a
generous gush of loving details: “bills paid to vanished / Department stores,” the
Defoean “in the wrack of a lifetime’s robinsonade,” the Keatsian “things of
beauty, toys forever,” “Trousers that have waited for waists / to match their
waistlines.” As a comic poet of the first rank, Disch knows his
stuff.
I don't have enough self-control to let the opportunity go by, so I will point out that Disch was also a science fiction writer of the first rank.
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