Bob Barth had David Leightty, publisher of Scienter Press in Louisville, Ky., send me a copy of Warren Hope’s chapbook Moving In (2004). Hope died in May at age seventy-seven. Like Barth, he was a Vietnam veteran, and some of his poetry was devoted to that war, as is the title poem in Moving In:
“The tent
was up but still unoccupied
When I moved
into it. I put the cot
Down at the
far end of the concrete slab,
And made it
up with clean, fresh-smelling sheets,
And shrouded
it with the mosquito net.
I slid a
clip into the M-16
And pulled a
single round up to the chamber,
But then
made sure I had the safety on.
My duffle
bag had made itself at home,
Leaning
against the cot down at the feet
Or, rather,
where in time my feet would be.
I sat down
and then smoked a cigarette,
Dead-tired
and yet afraid to go to sleep.”
Blank verse,
matter-of-fact language, nothing “poetic,” no cheating. Drama, if any, implied.
When I started reading the poem, part of me was waiting for the payoff, some
revelation, a touch of melodrama in the form of a punch line, as in a joke. It’s
not there. I’ve been conditioned, sorry to say, by decades of American free
verse, first-person lyrics with their cheesy appeal to acceptable, predictable emotion. That’s
not Hope’s (or Barth’s) style.
In 1988,
Barth published Hope’s ten-poem Recordings.
Included is “Between Sets.” The subtitle is “Muggsy Spanier addresses a patron of Club Hangover.” For non-jazz
listeners, Spanier (1901-67) was a cornetist; “Fatha,’” the pianist Earl “Fatha”
Hines (1903-83); Miff Mole (1898-1961), a trombonist:
“Fatha’ and
I still have this steady gig
And nightly
crank the old machine. Why not?
It keeps the
hawk down and the wolf away.
“I hear Miff
died and they sold his horn
To help pay
for a pauper’s funeral.
It’s no good
your complaining of such things:
I notice how
the shifting of the tide
Leaves
flopping creatures stranded on the beach;
My guess is
they don’t curse the fickle sea.
“At times I
almost envy Miff his end:
If you
believe, he’s sure in heaven now;
If not, well
then, at least he’s been released.
“Safe in the
bosom of Abraham either way.
He’ll never
play another house
Or pray for
one more string of one night stands.
“We ought to
finish with a tune for him.
I better
split, and go tell Fatha’ Hines
We’ll take
Miff home tonight with Didn’t He Ramble.”
Click here
for Louis Armstrong’s version of “Oh, Didn’t He Ramble,” composed in 1902 by J.
Rosamond Johnson, James Weldon Johnson and Bob Cole. It’s one of the songs
traditionally played at the conclusion of a New Orleans funeral service, as the
mourners walk away.
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