Words are paltry things, but what’s the alternative? While writing that sentence I was ambushed by an echo of Yeats, though I had another poet in mind when I started. “Grief” is a late poem by George Herbert. Its first two-thirds are uncharacteristically hackneyed. He calls on clouds and rain to help him shed tears – an embarrassingly bad conceit. But Herbert recovers beautifully in the final third:
“Verses, ye
are too fine a thing, too wise
For my rough
sorrows: cease, be dumbe and mute,
Give up your
feet and running to mine eyes,
And keep
your measures for some lovers lute,
Whose grief
allows him musick and a ryme:
For mine
excludes both measure, tune, and time.
Alas, my God!”
Words, and by
implication all poetry and art, are at best second-best. As humans we are not
equipped to deal with the memory of what happened twenty-one years ago. What
remains are “rough sorrows” -- loss,
bereavement, anger, grief. In Music at
Midnight: The Life and Poetry of George Herbert (University of Chicago
Press, 2014), John Drury writes:
“There is
nothing like one’s own, real pain. It wrings from him that last line, its
brevity bringing the poem to a shuddering halt.”
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