John Updike published “Kenneths” in the July 5, 1958 issue of The New Yorker and collected it in his second book of poems, Telephone Poles (1963):
“Rexroth and
Patchen and Fearing—their mothers
Perhaps
could distinguish their sons from the others,
But I am
unable. My inner eye pictures
A
three-bodied sun-lover issuing strictures,
Berating ‘Tom’
Eliot, translating tanka,
Imbibing
espresso and sneering at Sanka—
Six arms,
thirty fingers, all writing abundantly
What pops
into heads each named Kenneth, redundantly.”
My brother
is a Kenneth, named after our mother’s oldest brother. That’s what caught my eye
in Updike’s Collected Poems 1953-1993
(Knopf, 1993). He includes it in that volume’s “Light Verse” section, and the putdown
is delicious. Three mediocre American poets made fun of by a writer only twenty-six
years old, who hadn’t yet published any of his fifty books. As poets, the trio embodied
various degrees of countercultural hipness but couldn’t write an interesting
line. Updike tells us in his “Preface”:
“As a boy I
wanted to be a cartoonist. Light verse (and the verse that came my way was
generally light) seemed a kind of cartooning in words, and through light verse
I first found my way into print. . . . the idea of verse, of poetry, has
always, during forty years spent working primarily in prose, stood at my elbow,
as a standing invitation to the highest kind of verbal exercise—the most
satisfying, the most archaic, the most elusive of critical control. In hotel
rooms and airplanes, on beaches and Sundays, at junctures of personal happiness
or its opposite, poetry has comforted me with its hope of permanence, its
packaging of flux.”
I grew up
reading Updike, starting with the short-story collection Pigeon Feathers (1962), and read most of his books as they were
published. Today, three parts of his sprawling body of work still interest me:
the verse, light and otherwise; a dozen
or more of his short stories, especially the early work, in particular “The
Happiest I’ve Been” (The Same Door, 1959); and his reviews. After decades I still remember things he
wrote about Vladimir Nabokov and Henry Green. The novels no
longer mean much to me. I was surprised and saddened by his death in 2009 at
age seventy-six, but it inspired a reevaluation of his work. At the time I wrote:
“Ballots to
decide the question whether Updike’s books are ‘the work of a true poet’ are
available on the shelves on your public library.”
CWRU’s poet and writer Robert Wallace was Updike’s college roommate. Wallace edited a magazine of light verse - Light, a quarterly and Bits Press. Light regularly feature Updike’s poems. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Wallace_(poet)
ReplyDeleteJoke's on me, I guess - I like Fearing quite a bit. His faults are the faults of his era (almost everyone was too political in the 30's) but his verve and originality usually trump his tendency for the programmatic. I think he handles the ebb and flow of a long poetic line very well.
ReplyDeleteAlso, his novel The Big Clock is a brilliant thriller and well worth reading.
So there!