One of R.L. Barth’s sisters-in-law found a tote bag containing poems and drafts in a cupboard, most dating back to his time at Stanford in the late nineteen-seventies. He found epigrams (his trademark form as a poet) and some Martial translations. The bag also held “one fugitive Vietnam War epigram” he doesn’t remember having written. Subtitled “in memoriam, R.E., RVN [Republic of Vietnam], 1968,” it’s called “Death on a Bridge”:
“It wasn’t
just the way you died—
An
eighteen-year-old suicide—
But your
belief that Nothingness
Was
something, more or less.”
“Since I
have no more to say about Vietnam [I’m skeptical],” Bob says, “I guess this
epigram will have to remain an unpublished fugitive.” Some of Bob’s Vietnam poems are graphically violent. Not this one, though it seems more
chilling than most. It’s the attractiveness of “Nothingness” – note the
capitalization – that disturbs. It provided Bob’s friend and mine, the late
poet Helen Pinkerton, with one of her recurrent themes. In a 2011 interview
with James Matthew Wilson published in Think
Journal, citing her 1963 poem “Good Friday” (Taken in Faith, 2002; A Journey of the Mind: Collected Poems of Helen
Pinkerton 1945-2016, 2016), Helen says:
“I had been
obsessed for years with the notion of ‘nothingness,’ as used by the Existentialists,
by [Yvor] Winters, and by countless other writers because it seemed to reflect
my own emotional experience—the habitual rejection of what is for what is not.
. . . a kind of compulsive pursuit of guilt that causes us to wreck everything
we attempt to do.”
Here are the
second and third stanzas of Helen’s “Good Friday”:
“Nothingness
is our need:
Insatiable
the guilt
For which in
thought and deed
We break
what we have built.
“Nothing
draws us down
A vortex of
confusion,
Where shape
appears to drown,
And being seems delusion.”
No comments:
Post a Comment