[New-Poetry] Re: Longenbach on Oppen
Anny Ballardini
anny.ballardini at tin.it
Sat Jan 26 22:05:34 EST 2008
found on the net:
http://www.box.net/shared/sdcqkngjxf
Message that my father (in S F) was dying.
Hypochondriac family; my father less ill than that,
the meeting in his hospital room as equivocal, as
difficult, as dangerous to me as all our meetings--
The nurse came into the room and asked me to wait
outside a moment. I walked down the hall to a little
waiting room and sat down. The floor-nurse on duty
recognized me (I look like my father) She said, I
guess what a man cares most about in his life is his
son. I was startled and absolutely unprepared. My
father's temperature was running fairly high, I
realized that he must have talked of me. My face must
have shown how startled and how unprepared I was. The
nurse saw it, and she began to cry God help us all.
(Letters 208)
G.Oppen
----- Original Message -----
From: David Graham
To: NewPoetry: Contemporary Poetry News &Views
Sent: Saturday, January 26, 2008 8:28 AM
Subject: [New-Poetry] Re: Longenbach on Oppen
In my maximalist mood in recent years, I haven't been much drawn to Oppen, but I'd certainly go with "austere lyricism" as a description.
The following may currently be my favorite Oppen poem because it's not especially typical. A more traditional lyric, maybe?
From a Photograph
Her arms around me --child--
Around my head, hugging with her whole arms,
Whole arms as if I were a loved and native rock,
The apple in her hand--her apple and her father, and my nose pressed
Hugely to the collar of her winter coat. There in the photograph
It is the child who is the branch
We fall from, where would be bramble,
Brush, bramble in the young Winter
With its blowing snow she must have thought
Was ours to give to her.
--George Oppen
========================================
David Graham
grahamd at ripon.edu
Home Page:
http://web.mac.com/drjazz/iWeb/Site/About%20Me.html
Poetry Library:
http://web.mac.com/drjazz/iWeb/Site/DGPoLibrary.html
==========================================
On Jan 26, 2008, at 10:21 AM, JforJames at aol.com wrote:
In a message dated 1/25/2008 10:32:14 PM Eastern Standard Time, mandolin at mac.com writes:
George Oppen, who wrote some of the most austerely beautiful poems
> of the twentieth century,
I woder if someone could post or point me to a poem of Oppen's that
might justify Longenbach's statement. It could be a personal failure
on my part , but I've never been able to finish half a page of him--
and that seems to have usually meant about 15 words. If it is just me,
can someone give me a clue?
This may not justify Longenbach's statement, but here's the full poem
of which he quoted only a snippet in the article...
Psalm
veritas sequitur...
In the small beauty of the forest
The wild deer bedding down—
That they are there!
Their eyes
Effortless, the soft lips
Nuzzle and the alien small teeth
Tear at the grass
The roots of it
Dangle from their mouths
Scattering earth in the strange woods.
They who are there.
Their paths
Nibbled thru the fields, the leaves that shade them
Hang in the distances
Of sun
The small nouns
Crying faith
In this in which the wild deer
Startle, and stare out.
--Goerge Oppen, Collected Poems. Copyright © 1975 by George Oppen. Reprinted with the permission of New Directions Publishing Corporation.
(In case the formatting comes out wrong, please note that first lines of stanzas 2 thru 5 are tabbed over to the right)
--
Squall
coming about
When the squall knocked her
Flat on the water. When she came
Upright, here rig was gone
And her crew clinging to her. The water in her cabins
Washing thru companionways and hatches
And the deep ribs
Had in that mid-passage
No kinship with any sea.
--George Oppen
(The Collected Poems of George Oppen, New Directions, 1975)
--
Others I like: "Resort," "The Mayan Ground," "Inlet," and pretty much all of "Of Being Numerous."
It seems apt to describe Oppen's poetry as an 'austere lyricism'.
Finnegan
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