The seasons as allegory work best in Northern latitudes. Spring is birth and winter is – well, death – and then spring is birth again. Native Northerners internalize the cycle. We know that winter toughens us and summer is profligate. Further south, the seasons blur and are hardly there at all. As I write on Tuesday, the temperature in Houston is 85 degrees, the leaves are green and butterflies flit in the front garden. An eternal semi-summer, interrupted by the odd hurricane. Every autumn (by the calendar), the season feels wrong. My last Northern autumn was nineteen years ago but it still turns within me like a seasonal circadian rhythm.
An informal
search suggests November appears more often than any other month in the poems
of L.E. Sissman (1928-76). He was a lifelong Northerner. Born in Detroit, he
lived most of his life in greater Boston and was diagnosed in 1965 with Hodgkin’s
lymphoma, then a routinely fatal disease. The final section of the title poem
in his first collection, Dying: An
Introduction (1968), opens with these lines: “Outside, although November by
the clock, / Has a thick smell of spring.” And closes with these:
“Through my /
Invisible new veil / Of finity, I see / November’s world— / Low scud, slick
street, three giggling girls-- / As, oddly, not as somber / As December,/ But
as green / As anything: / As spring.”
The poem is loosely
organized around the seasons and the diagnosis and treatment of Sissman’s
cancer. That the final section is titled “Outbound” suggests the poet was a
realist. Finity is a rare word that means
“the condition of being subject to limitations.” Youth’s illusions of
immortality have been dismissed. Winter is coming.
In his
second collection, Scattered Returns
(1969), Sissman includes “A War Requiem,” arranged in five movements with thirty-two subsections
– twenty-three pages in Hello, Darkness:
The Collected Poems of L.E. Sissman (1978). The poem’s scheme is a forty-year sampler
of American life starting with the Great Depression, thematically bracketed by
World War I and Vietnam. The scaffolding of “A War Requiem” is Sissman’s life.
Here are the opening lines of the twenty-first section, “A Marriage, 1958”:
“November
russets flush the last of green
Out of its
summer coverts; mist and frost
Condense and
crystallize on lignified
Black twigs;
red berries shrivel; a sad light
Undistances
horizons, setting dense
Swatches of
nothingness beyond the fence
In
non-objective umber.”
The month
reappears in the twenty-third section, “Cambridge, 1963,” which mingles
national and personal history:
“A wake,
without the whiskey or the words
Of eulogy, before
the one blue eye
Of
television in the deepening
November
evening. When, earlier,
My secretary
said that she’d heard that he
Had just
been shot, we gaped in nervous pre-
Lapsarian
unbelief. Now it is not
More real
but we are less so . . .”
In his essay
“A Novembrist Manifesto” (Innocent
Bystander: The Scene from the 70’s (Vanguard Press, 1975), Sissman writes
an appreciation of a much-misunderstood month, originally published in the
November 1971 issue of The Atlantic:
“In the dark
day of November, it is often three o’clock in the morning. We sit alone,
freshly reminded of our mortal state, in inconsolable judgment on the waning
sources of our unfounded pride. Our achievements wither and dry and shrivel to
insignificance until they’d fit the head
of a pin; our ego, a summer roarer, now sits, a bad boy, in the dunce’s corner;
our petty crimes against ourselves and others now pass in review at regimental
strength before our routed-marshal’s eyes.”
The title, I assume, is adapted from the Russian "Decembrist Manifesto" of 1825. Sissman next
addresses the role of November in life’s allegory:
“To buoy
ourselves up and carry our frail selves through the rising insupportability of
life, we take on, through the year, a thick, false costume of defenses crowned
with a raffish, reckless, smiling social mask and founded on false pride and
false belief in our immortal Geist.
In November, all that falls away, and we sit alone with the knowledge of a
failing body and a failed mind that has hardly begun to attack its objectives.”
You don’t
need to be dying of cancer to get the message. November, leafless and cold in the North, is
a month of reckoning, a time to take a hard look at ourselves. It’s no
coincidence that Thanksgiving Day comes later
this month. Sissman doesn’t leave us beat-up and tempted by self-pity:
“Then, of
course—the larder bare, the slate wiped clean—the hope is free to start. Once
our attention has been distracted from the screaming, constant claims of self,
we can begin again from square one of our humble, real, deflated self. We
suddenly have time—for the first time in a year—for pity that is not coextensive
with ourselves. We have time to stop taking others for granted or for pawns in
our personal politics and to see them, objectively and shamingly, as more
steadfast and less self-blandished than we are. We have time to pay our
respects, our too-long-deferred tributes, to the people who have sheltered and
nurtured us in spite of our pretensions.”
Half-forgotten
or never known in the first place, L.E. Sissman is one of our most rewarding
writers. His gravitas, courage and ready sense of absurdity are bracing in this age
of whining and self-obsession. Four and a half years after writing this essay,
he was dead at age forty-eight.
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