Several years ago I was diagnosed with a condition called MGUS (pronounced EM-gus) -- monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance. It’s a symptom-less and in most cases benign disorder, but it can be a precursor to multiple myeloma. It means I see my oncologist once a year, pee in a cup and have blood drawn. On Thursday I was sitting in the doctor’s waiting room with a dozen other people, most of them roughly my age, several of whom appeared unwell and unhappy.
Usually I bring
a book when I see a doctor but this time I forgot and was reduced to browsing
one of the literature racks on the wall. In a pamphlet I discovered a
wonderfully acronym-ed disorder – POEMS syndrome (polyneuropathy, organomegaly,
endocrinopathy, monoclonal plasma cell disorder, skin changes). One doesn’t
expect to find comic relief, especially of a literary nature, in an oncologist’s
office.
The unexpected
linkage of disease and verse reminded me of cancer’s poet laureate, L.E.
Sissman, who was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma in 1965 at the age of
thirty-seven. How thrilling and brave that a poet who had cancer for eleven years
and died of the disease at forty-eight should begin a poem with the phrase
“Life is so long . . .” and that it should be published posthumously in his Collected Poems (1978). No one has
written so unromantically and with such wit about the certainty of a
foreshortened life as Sissman. Never “inspirational” in the banal sense – no
cheerleading or related fraudulence -- his humor and mastery of craft inspire
admiration. Here is “Spring Song,” written in the spring of 1972, four years
before his death:
“Life is so
long the passage of the seasons
Blurs like a
carrousel before the static
Eyes of the
onlooker who, rising fifty,
Grows slow
and oaklike, dying in his fashion
Of
imperceptible progress to the autumn,
While
grasses spring in unison from the meadows
Full-blown
in seconds, lilacs bloom and blacken
In minutes,
apple blossoms shuck their petals
And grow
green fruit in hours, ashes open
Fistfuls of
leaflets, whose light-green veins darken
To forest
green, lighten to tones of copper,
And fall
down in a day to usher winter
Into his
complex of spare silver branches,
His winter
palace, in a growing silence.
I hate, as
agent for my slowly failing
Senses, my
withering sinews, drying juices,
And
hardening heart, these hasty evidences
Of what I’ll
come to in the coming season
Of
reckoning, when all the green will vanish
From
expectation, all anticipation
Of folly to
be rectified tomorrow
Will perish,
and a leafless log of body
Will be cast
on the wood fire in December.”
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