I knew a guy years ago in Cleveland who already thought of himself as a poet. He published in “underground” magazines that briefly flourished around the city in the sixties and seventies, usually mimeographed on odd-colored, pulpy paper and stapled along the edge. His poems buttonholed the reader. The word that comes to mind is exhortatory. Combine it with the fashionable politics of the era, the presence of obscenity and absence of upper-case letters and you get the picture.
For me he was more of a
drinking companion than a poet. I was on the fringes of his retinue, and haven’t
seen him in forty-five years. He never published anything beyond the
throw-aways I described. I never took his poems seriously. What bothered me was
that I feared I might turn into him. Now I hear he is dead at age seventy-two.
There’s no obituary. What I know is scuttlebutt relayed by old acquaintances.
People tell me he taught for a long time in an “alternative” school. He never
married and had no children. By the end – I’m extrapolating here – poetry for
him was a threadbare memory. They say he drank.
I remember him more
vividly than I might have because I always associated him with a poem by Edwin
Arlington Robinson. “Miniver Cheevy” was published in the March 1907 issue of Scribners
and collected in 1910 in The Town Down the River. I suppose it’s
Robinson’s best-known poem after “Richard Cory.” He had a gift for concise
storytelling. We remember his people the way we remember Chekhov’s. Like
Cheevy, the old poet in Cleveland “sighed for what was not, / And dreamed, and
rested from his labors.” The final stanza is grim and prophetic:
“Miniver Cheevy, born too
late,
Scratched his head and kept on thinking;
Miniver coughed, and
called it fate,
And kept on drinking.”
Not D.A. Levy, I guess.
ReplyDeleteI am also from Cleveland, grew up during the same period, visited Kay’s…knew some poets. Can you drop me an email and let me know who you are talking about?
ReplyDeleteJohn Stickney
Stickney_jj@yahoo.com