“Chaos and tragedy were around him early, in the impersonal mess of war and in events that touched him more intimately, and seeing them firsthand gave him a passion for order, propriety, and a humane justice. He loved (the word is not an exaggeration) these three qualities because he thought they were the best guarantee of civilized life, and because he knew from his own experience how fragile they are and how easily they can slip into the cruelty, willfulness, and self-righteous rage to which none of us, at our worst, is immune.”
Helen Pinkerton
once told me that though she had known Edgar Bowers and his poems for more than
half a century, she still found much of his early work difficult. Her admission
shouldn’t be mistaken for dismissal. Helen never thought Bowers’ poems were meaningless
or incoherent, as a lazy reader might. She trusted the poet and his poems, and found the experience of returning
to them a rewarding exercise. To her, Bowers made difficulty useful, even stimulating.
The quoted passage
at the top is from a memorial essay Dick Davis wrote for Poets and Writers, “The Mystery of Consciousness: A Tribute to the
Poet Edgar Bowers,” several months after Bowers’ death in 2000 at age
seventy-five. Drafted into the army during World War II, he worked in counterintelligence
in Germany, and was stationed for a year at Hitler’s retreat, Berchtesgaden. Davis’
mention of the “impersonal mess of war” prompted me for the first time to think
of Bowers as a World War II poet, along with such fellow Americans as Anthony
Hecht, Howard Nemerov, Karl Shapiro and Richard Wilbur. Consider the sixth
section of “Autumn Shade,” collected in his second book, The Astronomers (1965):
“Snow and
then rain. The roads are wet. A car
Slips and
strains in the mire, and I remember
Driving in
France: weapons-carriers and jeeps;
Our clothes
and bodies stiffened by mud; our minds
Diverted
from fear. We labor. Overhead,
A plane,
Berlin or Frankfurt, now New York.
The car
pulls clear. My neighbor smiles. He is old.
Was this our
wisdom, simply, in a chance,
In danger,
to be mastered by a task,
Like groping
round a chair, through a door, to bed?”
Bowers never
describes combat. Typically, as in this passage, he moves from a remembrance of
war or its aftermath, briefly ponders it, and moves on to today. By rough
count, in the 168 pages of his Collected
Poems (1997), he published some thirty poems that make reference, usually muted,
to the war and his experience of it. As Davis notes, “there is no welter of unjustified
emotion” in the poems. In other words, though obliquely autobiographical,
Bowers will never be mistaken for a confessional poet. He’s no Anne Sexton. In “Clothes,”
among the new poems in Collected Poems,
he describes the discovery of the body of a German woman who has committed suicide,
and his reaction:
“I sobbed
out loud and, on my uniform,
Vomited up
my lunch—over the tie,
The polished
buttons and insignia,
The little
strips of color and the green
Eisenhower
jacket with its Eagle patch,
The taut
pants in a crease, the glistening jump-boots—
Vomiting and
still sobbing, like a child
Awakened in
the night, and sick. Wegner and Hans
Held me,
murmuring, ‘Ach, dear sir, the war
Is over and
not over, such things happen.’”
I sense
Bowers’ reputation is in severe eclipse, like many of our best writers. If he
is remembered, it is often as a gay poet. I would hope that someone better
equipped than I, more attuned to scholarship and criticism, would look at Bowers as a war
poet. Davis writes in his tribute:
“He is a
hard man to describe, because he eschewed the eccentric and flamboyant, and was
almost studiously ‘ordinary’ in everyday life. He had a deep distrust for the
cult of ‘the poet’ and used to say trenchantly, ‘A man is only a poet when he
is writing a poem.’”
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