The late D.G. Myers and I once talked about the tendency to pigeonhole writers according to some aspect of their subject matter. Melville is your go-to cetology guy and Edith Wharton took care of sleds. Or, as Nabokov said of Hemingway’s books: “something about bells, balls and bulls.” David and I both admired the American poet L.E. Sissman, who was diagnosed in 1965 with Hodgkin’s disease, the cancer that would kill him eleven years later. In that interval he published three collections of poetry and numerous essays and reviews in The New Yorker and The Atlantic, while also working for an advertising agency in Boston. My friend David would die of cancer in 2014, seven years after he was first diagnosed. He once wrote to me about Sissman, “No one else is his equal in capturing the experience of living with the disease,” and then quoted him:
“Abridged, I
burned with moral purpose, seethed
With fever
to persist, sang angry songs
Of vengeful,
mutinous futility,
Slowed my
halt feet to a death march, prolonged
The
bittersweetness of each breath, paroled
Myself with
garlands of last words. . . .”
It’s true
that many of Sissman’s poems, including most of his best, chronicle his life with cancer. I’m increasingly reluctant to categorize him as “the poet
laureate of cancer,” as I have in the past, just as I don’t want to confine Philip
Larkin to the death and depression file. Sissman is among the wittiest of
American poets and he covered some of the same middle-class ground as his friend John Updike. The first poem in his first collection, Dying: An Introduction (1968), is an eight-page, three-part
sequence, “Going Home, 1945.” The fifth part of the second section details a familiar
twentieth-century American landscape and is titled “The Town”:
“In this al
fresco gallery of Sheelers –
Replete with
stack and tipples, ramps and hoppers,
Vents,
derricks, ducts, louvers, and intercooler –
I wander
lonely as a cloud. Here is the beauty
Of this
ridiculous, gas-smelling city.
Not those
gilt towers stuck up so proudly
To spell a
skyline, not those too loudly
Dulcet and
unobtrusively huge houses
Dotting the
northern suburbs. No, the heart
Of it is
where its masters’ love is:
In the
cold-rolling mills, annealing rooms,
Pickling and
plating vats, blast furnaces,
Drop-forging
shops, final assembly lines:
Wherever
angular, ideal machines,
Formed
seamlessly of unalloyed desire,
Strike
worthless stereotypes out of the fire.”
The
reference in the first line is to painter-photographer Charles Sheeler
(1883-1965), a first-generation American Modernist who often painted industrial
landscapes. Among Sissman’s gifts was the pleasure he took in artful arrangements
of detail. Sissman’s editor and literary executor Peter Davison described him
as a “master of every curiosity.” Among the pleasures of reading Sissman is the
generous attention he pays to the world. He sees things and knows how things
work. Count the loving specificities in this section of “Going Home,
1945”:
“There still
remain these nights
Of close
restraint in heat, a camisole
Of dampness
wired for the amazingly
Loud sound
of streetcars roller-skating; for
The shocking
sight of the electric-blue
Stars
overhead; for their galvanic smell
Of ozone;
and the unforgettable scent
Of
air-conditioned drugstores, where the pure
Acid of
citrus cuts across the fat
Riches of
chocolate, subjugates perfume
(Evening in
Paris), soap, iodoform.”
Sissman adds an epigraph from Larkin: “Home is so sad. It stays as it
was left . . .”
I had an uncle who also died of Hodgkin's Disease during the same era as Sissman. He was diagnosed with it in 1960 and died of it in 1969, two months shy of his 42nd birthday.
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