Much of my education I owe to the editors of anthologies, such forgotten instructors as Oscar Williams, Louis Kronenberger and William Cole. Every writer, when we are young, comes as a blank-slate revelation, especially to those of us from nonreading families. Thus begins the process of honing one’s critical sense, sifting the worthless from the good and both from the great. Anthologists help streamline the process, especially when we are relying on public libraries and used bookstores. To Oscar Williams I owe my first exposure to many poets I’m still reading today – Thomas Hardy, Karl Shapiro, Howard Nemerov. Try to imagine a reading life devoted exclusively to contemporary poets, those marketed in our deeply unpoetic age.
Later came The Oxford
Book of Twentieth Century English Verse (1973), edited by Philip Larkin,
who was updating Yeats’ Oxford Book of Modern Verse 1892-1935 (1937). In
an interview with Anthony Thwaite at the time of publication, Larkin explained
his method of selection: “Well, in simplistic terms, I read all the poetry
produced in this century, which took about four and a half years, and then
picked out the bits I liked best.” That sounds likes the ideal formula for
producing a readable anthology – relying on personal taste, with no touting of
affirmative action or other extraliterary criteria. Present in Larkin’s volume are
all the usual suspects – Hardy, Eliot, Auden – but these are poets we already
know and have been reading for decades, and whose books we probably own. The
true value of Larkin’s anthology to readers, especially Americans, are the
previously unknown or little-known poets. Take this epigram by Humbert Wolfe (1885-1940),
which seems truer than ever of journalists of any nationality:
“You cannot hope
to bribe or twist,
thank God! the
British journalist.
“But, seeing what
the man will do
unbribed, there’s
no occasion to.”
I have never read another
word by Wolfe, but that poem sticks with me, as does John Pudney’s “Missing,”
written after he was commissioned into the Royal Air Force during World War II as
an intelligence officer:
“Less said the better.
The bill unpaid, the dead
letter.
No roses at the end
Of Smith, my friend.
“Last words don’t matter,
And there are none to
flatter.
Words will not fill the
post
Of Smith, the ghost.
“For Smith, our brother,
only son of a loving
mother,
The ocean lifted, stirred,
Leaving no word.”
Among Larkin’s other charmers
are F. Pratt Green’s “The Old Couple,” May Wedderburn Cannan’s “Rouen” and
Laurence Lerner’s “A Wish.” There’s a good chance I’ll never read another poem
by any of these writers but I’m grateful to Larkin for what he salvaged.
Reverence is implied by inclusion in a thoughtfully edited anthology. In literary
matters, there’s a tendency to equate quantity with quality, which is deeply
unfair and ungrateful. Think of Ralph Ellison and Invisible Man. He tormented
himself with his inability to finish a second work of fiction, yet he gave us
what is arguably the twentieth-century’s Great American Novel. Likewise, Philip
Larkin published four collections of poems during his lifetime. Counting previously
unpublished work, he left us fewer than 25o poems, yet among them are some of
his century’s finest. To a writer who leaves us a single good poem or novel we owe an enormous debt.
1 comment:
"Rouen" is a wonderful poem, and not irrelevant to the fact that the city of Rouen and the city of Cleveland, Ohio are sister cities since 2008.
In World War One, a medical contingent from Cleveland was the first representative of the U.S Army to arrive in France after America officially joined the war.
The Clevelanders took over military hospitals in Rouen and cared for thousands of British, French and German wounded under difficult conditions. Who knows but that theirs was the "Cool, white-bedded aid post" referred to in the poem.
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