Turner Cassity titled his 1998 collection of selected poems The Destructive Element. Readers of Conrad will recognize the allusion to Lord Jim. In Chapter 20, Stein says to Marlow:
“A man that
is born falls into a dream like a man who falls into the sea. If he tries to
climb out into the air as inexperienced people endeavor to do, he drowns—Nicht wahr? . . . No I tell you. The way
is to the destructive element submit yourself, and with the exertions of your
hands and feet in the water make the deep, deep sea keep you up.”
In Chapter
35, Marlow recalls Stein’s observation like this: “‘In the destructive element
immerse! . . . To follow the dream, and again to follow the dream—and so—always—usque ad finem [to the very end].’”
Stein has
already diagnosed Jim’s “vivid and romantic nature,” identifying him as an
idealist in an adversarial world. Cassity would likely endorse Stein’s
conclusions. He is the least romantic of poets. His sensibility is skeptical, full
of disdain for fashion and hypocrisy, and, always, very funny. Nowhere in his selected
poems does Cassity use the phrase “destructive element,” except in his title,
though you sense its presence everywhere, as in “Meaner than a Junkyard Dog, or, Turner’s Evil Twin”:
“Life,
genetic outcome of a code
That has its
blind spots, parallels what it is not—
An endless
replicase of what it has destroyed
To be. Dumb
corpse one carries, Siamese dark self
Whose only
life is to embarrass, in our joint
Past where
did we in aim diverge?”
Conrad and
Jim do make an appearance in another of the collection’s new poems, “Double
Passage on the Holland-Amerika”:
“Designed
for long North River piers and not for cruising,
Nieuw Amsterdam takes up the dockside in San Juan.
And, as the
crew comes off, it out-exotics it.
In 1954 no
one, and least of all
The
Netherlands, will own to hiring lascars. Not
Sumatrans?
Dyaks? Javanese? The officers
Who
tally-off the tourists are so spic and blond
They would
be tarred as raving High Colonials—
Tar being
white as well as black—if they were each
Precursors
of a Peace Corps acting Gandhi out,
Or Angels of
the Lord come down dispensing cures
I am a young
man in the Army reading Conrad;
It’s almost
more than I can stand: the full effect
Of earrings
and of fish-heads, and of Tuan Jim
Before the
fall, in the enjoyments of a weekend pass.
“In 1992 I
am as old as Marlow.
Not to brag,
almost as traveled. On a warm
Fall day in
San Francisco, near as memory,
Nieuw Amsterdam sails in. Another of that name;
Lord Jim’s
command is long since in the wreckers’ hands.
But as if
answering a summons, here I am,
Again beside
the pier. If who sought after youth
And fountain
did not find them, it is possibly
Because it
never dawned on them to ask in Dutch,
Or check the
bilges. And as into Miramar
So long ago,
the men head for their own time off.
They have
had orthodontia, or a better diet—
All the
fish, not just the head. The summer whites
Set off the
half-caste, as the deep suntans the blond.
Must I re-read An Outcast of the Islands, or re-write it?”
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