When I’m told someone, somewhere has started a new poetry journal, a little piece of me dies. Just what we’ve been waiting for: more precious self-revelations, strident politics and lineated prose. Nice to know the world can still surprise us. An Australian, Clarence Caddell, has published the first issue of The Borough: A Journal of Poetry, and it seems to be written by and for grownups. He takes its title from George Crabbe’s wonderful, largely forgotten poem “The Borough” (1810) and quotes its opening lines:
“‘Describe
the Borough’—though our idle tribe
May love
description, can we so describe,
That you
shall fairly streets and buildings trace,
And all that
gives distinction to a place?”
Caddell then
quotes Edwin Arlington Robinson’s sonnet “George Crabbe”:
“Give him
the darkest inch your shelf allows,
Hide him in
lonely garrets, if you will,—
But his
hard, human pulse is throbbing still
With the sure
strength that fearless truth endows.”
Among
Caddell’s “manifesto-ish statements” is this: “The Borough is grounded in the deep tradition of English poesy;
that is, the one going back to Chaucer and beyond, not the one that started
with the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, and which seems likely to destroy all
meaningful literary culture.” You know already you’re not wasting your
time.
I’m familiar
with some of the poets here – among them, the Americans Maryann Corbett, Aaron Poochigian, Marly
Youmans and James Matthew Wilson, and the great Australian Stephen Edgar (read
his “Late Brahms”). What does it mean that I find the rare word eschaton in two poems by different
poets. Here is A.Z. Foreman’s “Portrait of Alexander German (Russian author
turned Romani poet)”:
“The past
was over. Its last sovereign died
gunned in
the chest, the children bayonetted
by sulfurous
powers that kept this man indebted
for kindness
to those history-mortified
nomads he loved. Their language, blazed state
pride,
nursed his
ear. Brass bands in the fresh time’s breeze
seemed
heralds to the eschaton of peace
so his verse
could lie honestly. He tried
to speak them civic, mindless how the slow
boils dribbled
in the twisting smile of Fate,
how Freedom
gaped and simpered from the snow,
and how Equality would fail a state
maimed on
its own myth to an altered throne
that bayonet and gun had made their own.”
And Youmans’
“Jenetta, Blessed”:
“A ruined
loveliness,
An eschaton
of blight,
Reminder
that to bless
Is
to take flight
“From what
is merely seen
To
revelation’s truth:
No longer
laughing queen
Of
hearts, you’re ruth
“And harrow
to men now,
Your essence
pulled inside
And
wordless, yet somehow
“You
still abide,
“Your
riddling self a thing
Composed of
flame and years
And silences
that bring
The
gift of tears.”
As Caddell
writes in his introduction:
“We don’t
mind a bit of personal confession, meditative epiphany or everyday mysticism,
but we do acknowledge that other modes are possible and often desirable.”
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