R.L. Barth has sent me a copy of his first book, Forced-Marching
to the Styx: Vietnam War Poems, a chapbook of twenty-one poems published by
Perivale Press of Van Nuys, Calif., in 1983, when Bob was already the poet
laureate of that war (not that there is much competition for the title). In
1968-69 he was a Marine serving as a patrol leader in the 1st Reconnaissance
Battalion.
Bob is by temperament and gift an epigrammist. His
poems are usually brief and terse, though this collection contains several
longer works, including “A Letter to My Infant Son.” At forty-three lines it is
by Barthian standards a veritable epic. He claims to dislike it but it’s a
favorite of his wife. The opening poem is one of his finest, “Reading
The Iliad.” It hints at the French colonial past of Southeast Asia and
leaves the dead and those who killed them unidentified. It suggests a sense of
solidarity among soldiers separated by millennia:
“Volume and desk, coffee
and cigarette
Forgotten, the reader,
held in Homer's mind,
Looks upon Greeks and
Trojans fighting yet,
The heroes and foot
soldiers, thin and blind,
“Forced-marching for the
Styx. But suddenly
Stunned by the clamor
under smoky skies,
Boastings and tauntings,
he looks up to see —
Not the god-harried plain
where Hector tries
His destiny, not the room;
instead, a mountain
Covered with jungle; on
one slope, a chateau
With garden, courtyard, a
rococo fountain,
And, faces down, hands
tied, six bodies in a row.”
The chapbook’s closing
poem is here titled “Postscript,” later retitled “Fieldcraft”:
"At last, the senses
sharpen. All around,
I listen closely. Under
the dull sound
Of distant artillery, and
the shrieking planes
Diving with napalm; under
the dry crack
Of automatic rifles; at
the back
Of consciousness, almost,
one sound remains:
Mud sucking at bare feet
as they are going
Between the rice shoots.
Nearly silent. Knowing.”
As the epigraph to the
chapbook Barth uses a line from Graham Greene: “One did not question during
the war why one fought: one waited till the war was over for that.”
[A partial bibliography of Barth’s work: Deeply Dug In (University of New Mexico Press, 2003); Learning War: Selected Vietnam War Poems (Broadstone Books, 2021); That Mad Game (Scienter Press, 2025); Pleasing the Diners: Translations from the Latin of Martial (Contubernales Books, 2026).]