“[H]e gave us some of the best poems of our times. And, after all, one must thank a man for what he has done and not condemn him for his failures.”
A timely,
guilt-inducing reminder. It’s easy to scold a writer for not producing a masterpiece
each time he goes to work. Good writers spoil us. They teach us how to read
their work and disappoint us when they appear to ignore their own lessons. Marius
Kociejowski writes above of Zbigniew Herbert and cites “The Envoy of Mr. Cogito”
and “Elegy of Fortinbras.” The latter is among the first of Herbert’s poems I
read, more than half a century ago. Fortinbras is the practical man, unlike
Hamlet who “believed in crystal notions not in human clay.” Herbert has him
say:
“Adieu
Prince I have tasks a sewer project
and a decree
on prostitutes and beggars
I must also
elaborate a better system of prisons”
With such
poems, Herbert enters the company of Montale, Cavafy, Mandelstam and
Auden. In his poem “The Stag,” dedicated to Herbert, Kociejowski writes:
“We were
nothing in ourselves nothing more.
If you must
blame, blame those who merely watched
And who were
brothers to none but themselves.
Were they
not summoned as we were summoned.”
Herbert was
born on October 29, 1924, in Lviv (Lvov, Lwów, Lemberg, Lwihorod, Leopolis),
then part of the Second Polish Republic, now in Ukraine.
[Kociejowski’s
essay on Herbert, “A Meeting with Pan Cogito,” is collected in The Pebble Chance: Feuilletons and Other Prose
(Biblioasis, 2014). “The Stag” can be found in his Collected Poems (Carcanet, 2019).]
Thank you for "The Envoy of Mr. Cogito".
ReplyDeleteVery moving.