Clipped from the New York Times, folded and tucked into Dying: An Introduction (1968) is the March 11, 1976 obituary for L.E. Sissman. The poet had died the previous day, age forty-eight. On the same page is the obituary for the Italian politician Attilio Piccioni, dead the same day, age eighty-three. Sissman’s anonymous obituarist quotes him as saying: “My mind is compartmentalized. In advertising you learn the discipline of working against deadlines. I find this useful in writing poetry.”
At the time
of his death, Sissman wrote copy for the Boston advertising firm of Quinn and
Johnson. I’ve read reviews of Sissman’s poetry that held this against him. The
three poetry collections Sissman published during his lifetime – including Scattered Returns (1969) and Pursuit of Honor (1971) – I found at
Kaboom Books here in Houston. All are first-edition paperbacks. Given the obit
and the good condition of the three volumes, I suspect they were previously
owned by someone who followed Sissman closely during his brief poetic career. The
poet had been diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma in 1965 at age thirty-seven. He became the poet laureate of cancer. Here are the opening lines of “A Deathplace” (go here to listen
to Sissman reading it), the first poem in Scattered
Returns:
“Very few
people know where they will die,
But I do; in
a brick-faced hospital,
Divided, not
unlike Caesarean Gaul,
Into three
parts . . .”
I also
bought a copy of A Place in the Country
(trans. Jo Catling, 2013) by the late W.G. Sebald. In his essay devoted to Robert
Walser, “Le Promeneur Solitaire,”
Sebald writes:
“The only
certain thing is that he writes incessantly, with an ever increasing degree of
effort; even when the demand for his pieces slows down, he writes on, day after
day, right up to the pain threshold and often, so I imagine, a fair way beyond
it.”
1 comment:
How silly and unthinking that people would hold Sissman's "secular" employment against him. A man's got to eat!
The American classical composer Charles Ives (1874-1954) was an insurance company executive who composed in the evenings, weekends, and other spare time. I don't think I've heard him criticized for it.
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