Years ago I was at a birthday party where one of the other guests was a stand-up comic and part-time journalist who lived in Woodstock, N.Y. He was smart, quick, funny and surprisingly well-read (he knew who Edward Dahlberg was). Neither of us was much of a party-goer so we spent most of the time in a corner, yacking. All went well until the conversation turned to poetry and poets. He revealed himself an enthusiast for Charles Olson and his “Maximus” poems, which I find simultaneously pretentious and incoherent, often pathologically so.
Things got a
little heated when I shared my admiration for the work of Anthony Hecht. This
was 1985. In the previous decade Hecht had published his finest volumes, Millions of Strange Shadows (1977) and The Venetian Vespers (1979), and the
comedian would have none of it. He dragged out the predictable adjectives – “academic,”
“formalist,” “elitist.” We had reached that place in a difference of opinion where
both parties realize changing the mind of the other is hopeless, and both are sufficiently
grown up to respect the other and move on. What I retain of our conversation is
his passionate distaste for Hecht’s work, something I had never before
encountered. I’ve since learned it’s hardly uncommon and often even nastier and
accompanied by obscenities.
Rather than launching
a general defense of Hecht’s work, I’ll point out a single quality we
repeatedly encounter in his poems that makes the best of them endlessly rereadable. Along
with his gorgeous, neo-Shakespearean language, Hecht, like a first-rate
novelist, enters the minds of his characters. He’s fond of dramatic monologues,
usually written in blank verse. He often includes a moment of epiphany
described by the narrator, as in “The Grapes” (The Venetian Vespers), in which the narrator is a young chambermaid:
“I stood
beside a table near a window,
Gazing down
at a crystal bowl of grapes
in
ice-water. They were green grapes, or rather,
They were a
sort of pure, unblemished jade,
Like
turbulent ocean water, with misted skins,
Their own
pale, smoky sweat, or tiny frost.
I leaned over
the table, letting the sun
Fall on my
forearm, contemplating them.
Reflections
of the water dodged and swam
In nervous
incandescent filaments
Over my
blouse and up along the ceiling.
And all
those little bags of glassiness,
Those
clustered planets, leaned their eastern cheeks
Into the
sunlight, each one showing a soft
Meridian
swelling where the thinning light
Mysteriously
tapered into shadow,
To cool
recesses, to the tranquil blues
That then
were pillowing the Beau Rivage.
Edge slowly
over their simple surfaces,
And feel the
sunlight moving on my skin
Like a warm
glacier. And I seemed to know
In my blood
the meaning of sidereal time
And know my
little life had somehow crested.
There was
nothing left for me now, nothing but years.”
Another blank-verse
monologue is “Green: An Epistle” (Millions
of Strange Shadows), which begins:
“I write at
last of the one forbidden topic
We, by a
truce, have never touched upon:
Resentment,
malice, hatred so inwrought
With moral
inhibitions, so at odds with
The
home-movie of yourself as patience, kindness,
And Charlton
Heston playing Socrates,
That almost
all of us were taken in,
Yourself not
least, as to a giant Roxy,
Where the
lights dimmed and the famous allegory
Of Good and
Evil, clearly identified
By the
unshaven surliness of the Bad Guys,
The virginal
meekness of the ingénue,
Seduced us
straight into that perfect world
Of Justice
under God.”
In 2001, the
English publisher Between the Lines put out a book-length interview, Anthony Hecht in Conversation with
Philip Hoy. Hecht discusses “Green: An Epistle” at length:
“[It] is
about the disguises of Pride. It is about how attempts to suppress the ego in
behalf of some idealism or the desire to appear kind and generous will quietly
and all unbeknownst to someone convert that suppression into a corruption of the
soul, a deformity of spirit, and the longer the suppression goes on the more
martyred and selfless one feels, and the more monstrous the deformity. . . . The
speaker . . . who is admittedly partly me, has succeeded in deceiving himself
into believing that his long-suffering patience and forbearance, his stoic
endurance, have paid off in the form of a noble and selfless character, and in
this he is profoundly mistaken.”
Finally, consider
the title poem in The Transparent Man
(1990), spoken by a thirty-year-old hospitalized woman dying of leukemia. Her
thoughts turn inevitably inward, but she remains engaged with the world:
“Now all the
leaves are down, you can see the spare,
Delicate
structures of the sycamores,
The fine
articulation of the beeches.
I have sat
here for days studying them,
And I have
only just begun to see
What it is
that they resemble. One by one,
They stand
there like magnificent enlargements
Of the
vascular system of the human brain.
I see them
there like huge discarnate minds,
Lost in
their meditative silences.”
Near the end
of the poem, this dying young woman, like the speaker in “Green: An Epistle,”
comes to understand the bottomless human capacity for self-delusion:
“And the
eye, self-satisfied, will be misled,
Thinking the
puzzle solved, supposing at last
It can look
forth and comprehend the world.
That's when
you have to really watch yourself.”
Hecht died at
age eighty-one on this date, October 20, in 2004. That same year we also lost Donald
Justice, Thom Gunn and Czesław Miłosz.
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