Out of the blue a reader asks for “the best poem ever written by Edgar Bowers.” He has never read Bowers but noted my love of his work. Yvor Winters, Bowers’ teacher at Stanford, insisted we read poems not poets, as few poets are on every occasion worth reading, though Bowers comes close. His Collected Poems (1997) brings together four earlier collections and twenty-four new poems and is 168 pages long. Asking another to select the “best” makes my reader sound dilettantish and lazy but I’m naïve enough to think Bowers may charm him into further exploring the work.
Bowers’
early poems are written in the “plain style” practiced by such seventeenth-century
English poets as Ben Jonson and Fulke Greville, and championed by Winters. They
are terse and padding-free. Even so intelligent and shrewd a reader as the late Helen Pinkerton
once confessed to me she still found the work in his first collection, The Form of Loss (1956), difficult. But
she never stopped reading.
Some readers
will find him off-puttingly cool and rational. They’ll hear no howls or
barbaric yawps. Not that Bowers is emotionless. The passion is contained, modulated
and held in its proper place by form. Try “Autumn Shade” from his second collection, The Astronomers (1965). A memory of his
Army service in Europe during and after World War II shows up in the sixth
stanza:
“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’
later work relaxed. He mastered blank verse and became nearly conversational. I
don’t know about “best” but perhaps my favorite Bowers poem is the title poem
in For Louis Pasteur (1990). More
memories of war as well as teaching. I always find moving the final section, in
which he names the heroes whose birthdays he observes every year:
“I like to
think of Pasteur in Elysium
Beneath the
sunny pine of ripe Provence
Tenderly
raising black sheep, butterflies,
Silkworms,
and a new culture, for delight,
Teaching his
daughter to use a microscope
And musing
through a wonder—sacred passion,
Practice and
metaphysic all the same.
And, each
year, honor three births: Valéry,
Humbling his
pride by trying to write well,
Mozart, who
lives still, keeping my attention
Repeatedly
outside the reach of pride,
And him
whose mark I witness as a trust.
Others he
saves but could not save himself—
Socrates,
Galen, Hippocrates—the spirit
Fastened by
love upon the human cross.”
Perhaps I’m
underestimating my reader. He may be ready for poetry unlike any being
written today. See if you and he can find Russell Fraser’s memoir of Bowers, “His Little Book and All the Rest,” published in the January 2008 issue
of The Yale Review. He recalls his
early encounters with Bowers’ work: “When I read Bowers first, I missed the
far-winding horns. Verbal music is not beyond him, only written in a minor key,
but he was not the Romantic poet a young man’s ear is tuned for.”
And this,
tersely expressing the way some of us read: “All our criticism, if any good,
comes partly from the viscera. Some sickle it over with a cast of dispassionate
thought; not Edgar . . .”
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