Archive for poetry

Sylvia’s Children . . . Make that Child

In second grade, we learned that Lincoln’s mother, Nancy Hanks, had died of milk sickness when he was very young.

I grieved for her. She was dead–would have been dead anyway, it being more than 100 years past that original death when I found out. I felt sorry for Abe, with a step-mother and all (being naive and only 7 I didn’t realize that stance might be prejudiced, hadn’t considered that fairy tales give step-moms a bad rap–probably undeserved.) Anyway, I didn’t analyze the feeling: I was sad. I didn’t want Abraham Lincoln’s mother to have died so young.

Later, I learned that in a billion years the sun will explode–and that made me sad as well. A grade school friend (other people have always been smarter about this than I) pointed out that I would be long dead by then. I was pretty good with numbers, I knew a billion was a big number and meant a long, long time. But I was sad for awhile.

Just now I read that Nicholas Hughes, age 47, son of Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes–the world’s champion survivor–killed himself in Alaska just weeks ago. He and his still living sister Frieda live in my memory as the two dead babies coiled at the dead mother’s breast in one of the Ariel poems. We all grieved for Sylvia and for Anne–Sexton. I grieved as well for John Berryman, whose verse I loved and whose wry spirit sparkled in my mind’s eye. I’m glad I never met him. Rumor has it he came to our college campus once so drunk he puked in the car on the way to the airport.

Get close to the dead and you’re done for.

I never grieved for Robert Lowell–who knows why?

Linda Sexton wrote a lovely reflection on Nicholas and the legacy of suicide. Parents who kill themselves leave an awful wreckage. I don’t have to comment on that; it’s quite well known. Berryman’s father killed himself when John was 10. Nicholas and Frieda lost their’s before they were three. Did they remember her at all?

Maybe Nicholas’ life was a triumph of sorts–he outlived Sylvia by 15 years. His father died some years ago–naturally, so at least his son spared him that terrible grinding guilt of thinking having been convicted by many of driving the mother to death he might, thus, be guilty also of his son’s.

So I’m sad. Sad as I only get over people I’ve never met.

Nicholas, as I learned about your mother–as I learned about Abe Lincoln’s mother–you became to me a tiny, indeterminate presence outside the kitchen on a cold morning in London. And she was vivid, blond, desperate, half psychotic and dead in an open gas stove like the one I grew up with. She had fallen asleep and left a legacy I admired more than any I can think of–not you, but three books of exceptional poetry, vivid, charged with intellect and imagination, and deathless.

So I wondered about you. And wondered. From time to time, knowing nothing until today when I opened the NYT online and found this editorial by Linda Sexton, saying how she has wanted to die by her own hand and wondering whether your sister may be OK. And I guess you were for awhile–a longish while. I trust there was some happiness, some love.

And so here I sit with little tears in my aging, well adjusted, half-decent poet’s eyes. I still miss Nancy Hank and John Berryman, wish they’d gone on–to see their children succeed, to celebrate the way life is supposed to succeed life and descent into death as a kind eventuality, not sought, not speeded up, expected, deferred, deflected and finally, inevitable and accepted. And I wish that for Nicholas, as well, who left his research and colleagues who liked and admired him.

Now he’s dead like Nancy and John, as the sun will be one day. And you and I. No doubt that’s the source of the sadness. At age 7 you can be sad and hopeful both. At 57 it’s harder–the dead seem deader and farther away. Especially those we only know as words.

Leave a comment »

Supermarket Sweet

A little cluster of my favorite poetry—even a short story by John Updike—is all about supermarkets. Allen Ginsburg may have started it with his poem about wandering the aisles and finding Walt Whitman. Randall Jarrell followed suit with a wistful and poignant self-portrait of a 1950s woman—forty-ish, probably—ruminating about loss and anonymity. John Updike’s short story “A & P,” comes from the perspective of the bag boy—a chivalrous wannabe in a fluorescent non-wilderness, tilting at the middle class manager instead of a windmill. Peter Meinke, a contemporary Florida poet, picks up there, ruminating that “My supermarket is bigger than your supermarket. / That’s what America is all about.”

Even Melanie (whom no one under forty-five has ever heard of) sings about supermarkets:
“Take the children to school, and you go to the grocery store. You pass as a grown-up . . . “
So even an aging, hippie-style rock singer, sees grocery shopping as the purview of middling: middle class, middle age, mediocrity.

In sum, the supermarket emerges as an icon of America—possibly America at its most generic and boring.

But here’s the thing for me: I love the grocery store. If I were T.S. Eliot, I might write: “At the supermarket, there I feel happy.” For fifty years I’ve passed through the automatic doors to push or help push a chromed metal basket up and down the aisles that prove we are a land of plenty. There are no secret corners in the average grocery store. Light pours from above and exhibits every can and every cellophane package, every freezer case and every squared off cereal box. The tomatoes glow, the peppers shine, the oranges reveal their leather peels. There is a peace that comes in knowing where one’s next meal comes from—and that when that meal ends, more awaits.

For me as for many women, the weekly (or more frequent) trip to the grocery reaffirms something gendered. Of course, sometimes an inner rebel curses the necessity and the obligation. Why should it be a woman thing? And, in fact, these days, it’s not so much. That’s the thing: everyone is there. One sees couples, whole families, young men—sometimes in pairs—prowling through the soda aisles and stacking their pizza boxes, young women searching for vegan ramen or shuttling their toddlers past the Captain Crunch. It’s a watering hole, a gathering place. Though privately owned, it truly belongs to its customers, much more than other retailers where we go from time to time and buy something different every time. At the grocery we buy the same things again and again. We lay claim to our brands and our nutritional profiles.

I regard the local Publix as “mine.” Having shopped there for 25 years, I know every aisle. I notice the gradual shifts in product lines. I’m proud that there are more organics now and the baggers and cashiers seem to appreciate my canvas bags. I nosh my way through the sample carts when it’s lunch time. I help people find the condiments if they ask. Sometimes I make friends with strangers waiting at the deli for lunch meat. The pharmacist recognizes me, and I her. And checking out I always enjoy the cashier’s banter with the bagger, or congratulate myself on my friendliness to the occasional mentally challenged cashier.

It’s all lovely and personal without the stress of real relationship. If I meet a neighbor, it’s a treat, but we don’t have to tarry long or delve into details. We’re busy. The supermarket is an oasis of civility. Being alone in the crowd—usually regarded as a curse—is a blessing here. You’re all in it together, but you’re all going home and won’t have to deal with each other for long.
When I leave with my one hundred dollars of produce, chicken et cetera and packaged groceries, I’ve accomplished something, I’ve socialized, I’ve once more staked out my identity and I’ve proved the world to be still reliably ordinary, even as it offers the danger of new hot peppers, the mystery of persimmons or guava or strange and spindly fungi from far away. The small adventures proffered are optional only, the comfort of familiarity is the mainstay.

And, just think, next week you get to go again.

Leave a comment »

Surrender 7208

Morning. It’s always morning, when
I’m reading & writing to prove
I read & write. This time it’s
Ferlinghetti. You can tell
can’t you? And, really, I already wrote

for awhile, in my chair, where the air
barely reaches from the vent, blowing
cool over empty tables & spaces, the fan
spinning casual as a flirtatious Flamenca’s fan.
Finally ineffectual.

Really, I was writing then
about God, as always, because I began
with Ephesians & trying to be the first
on my block to crack the nut of
the shape of time & God’s will

all that—which led me to

surrender. That’s what we do
willy nilly—without will, that is,
though feeling willful. I write.
I read. I eat. I drink the coffee
congratulating my spineless consciousness

that today it has cinnamon. Today I have written.
Today I have read. Today I have followed
myself. Ferlinghetti gives form to my thought
I am an echo. Ferlinghetti thinks about God.
I think because I have read Ferlinghetti

for years—though not constantly—he
was beginning of poetry for me —he
taught me all I knew before
I knew more & another thing or two.
I never knew Ginsberg until Ginsberg was

passé, had passed away— then I noticed
Howl, and Kaddish, then I loved the grocery poem
with Whitman in the aisles. I got it: he was not
some random madman tangling tradition’s web
he was strapped in reaction & I am strapped
in it & him & Ferlinghetti & neither he, nor I,

nor Ferlinghetti can help it—we are spinning
the web from our bellies because
that’s what we do—we practice
or perish, the publishing
public & frog-like takes its own

inevitable course, not predetermined but
inevitable nonetheless
RANDOM INEVITABILITY
that’s what I learned from the sandpiper tracks
of those verses in Coney Island of the Mind
my first favorites. That’s what I want to say

You wake up you read, you write, you eat
you type—or whatever, whatever strikes you even if it feels
forced and routine—you are the routine & the random
offshoot of some other routine.
Even if you’re out of cinnamon

walk out the door—Be surprised
by Ferlinghetti’s girl with the ice cream sprinkles
outside the dry cleaning store

or whatever the great and powerful Oz has in mind for you today.

Leave a comment »