Some years ago, out of the blue, a reader whose name I have forgotten sent me a copy of No Earthly Estate: The Religious Poetry of Patrick Kavanagh (The Columba Press, Dublin, 2002) by Father Tom Stack. I was grateful because it sent me back to the Irish poet (1904-67) who seems never to have earned quite the respect given his compatriots Heaney, Mahon and, of course, Yeats. Flann O’Brien famously mocked him – unfairly but amusingly. Louise Bogan claimed he possessed “an astonishing talent.” He must be read selectively, with an awareness of his slyly muted sense of humor. I don’t want to overstate Kavanagh’s virtues but wish to alert readers to his charms. Stack writes of Kavanagh’s verse:
“It is
neither false, forced nor sentimental. It is invariably simple in its depth,
devoid of advocacy, always honest, sparing in style and sometimes daring in its
laconic matter-of-factness.”
I browsed
again in Kavanagh’s poems after encountering “An Appeal to the Ghost of Patrick
Kavanagh” (Southwest Review, 2007) by
the late Brett Foster (1973-2015):
“These
lines, plain as the silent fields
you ploughed as the hours fell to sunset,
have neither the nerve of those severe
four-faced angels shown to Ezekiel,
nor the pure, symmetrical minuet
that scales the marveled arc of violins
in Handel's Largo. Even the grey-haired
folk-house guitar player who fights
to lay all the notes out right surely
performs a more auspicious act tonight,
eyes closed tightly, tracing perfectly
this basement stage behind the square
that hosts his quiet coronation.
“But if they
may, let the words glide
through the air like a mower’s blade,
working at harvest to reap the crops,
or let them turn and take the shape
of a young and clumsy farmer’s blunt
corkscrew tools, little spades that glint
as they prod the dark earth of the heart,
or gloved hands that -- moving the soil
still covering the yield -- scrape apart
the clods above the star-nose mole.”
In his early
years, Kavanagh worked a sixteen-acre farm in County Monaghan before moving to
Dublin in 1939. His best-known poem, The Great Hunger (Cuala Press, 1942), begins:
“Clay is the
word and clay is the flesh
Where the
potato-gatherers like mechanised scarecrows move
Along the
side-fall of the hill - Maguire and his men.
If we watch
them an hour is there anything we can prove
Of life as
it is broken-backed over the Book
Of Death?”
Foster celebrates the plainness of Kavanagh’s verse, the way it scorns grandiosity: “[L]et the words glide / through the air like a mower’s blade.”
Just received William H. Pritchard's latest collection: "Ear Training: Literary Essays" (Phladelphia: Paul Dry Books, 2023). Among the nearly 40 essays here are those on poets Emily Dickinson, Philip Larkin, Elizabeth Bishop, James Merrill, John Dryden, and four essays on Alexander Pope. Plus, lots of other interesting things (Samuel Johnson, Anthony Trollope, and Thomas Carlyle, for three).
ReplyDeleteAt 91, Pritchard is still being productive, to say the least.
Thanks, Patrick, for this post on Kavanagh. The poet's 1949 letter on post-Yeats poetry in Ireland can be found on the Poetry Foundation website.
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