THE LOS ANGELES TIMES BOOK PRIZE 1986
On Nov. 7, The Times will award its annual Book Prizes in five categories--biography, history, fiction, poetry and current interest--along with the Robert Kirsch Award for a body of work by a writer living in or writing on the West. This week we publish excerpts from some of the books nominated in poetry. Not excerpted, but also nominated, are: “Selected Poems†by John Ashbery, (Viking); “Collected Poems 1928-1985†by Stephen Spender (Random House) and “This Is Not a Letter and Other Poems†by Kay Boyle (Sun & Moon). “Selected Poemsâ€by Robert Bly
(Harper & Row).
Robert Bly is known to his readers as both a wonderful pastoral poet, capturing the Minnesota countryside in precise, pared - down observations, and a poet of political impact: His poems of protest against the war in Vietnam, “The Light Around the Body,†won him the National Book Award. In this anthology, Bly comments on his own professional evolution. Of the poems from “Silence in the Snowy Fields,†he writes: “At thirty-two I felt for the first time in adult life an unattached part of my soul join a tree standing in the center of a field. The tree’s experience, existing without human companionship, and losing and gaining its leaves alone, was not unlike my own fragmentation, or estrangement, or unattachment. . . . In such moments, prepared for by solitude and reading, I wrote a kind of poem I had never written before. It is not iambic, but free verse with distinct memories of form. . . . I don’t feel much human relationship in these poems, and the hundred thousand objects of twentieth-century life are absent also.â€
Uneasiness in Fall The fall has come, clear as the eyes of
chickens.
Awkward sounds come from the sea,
Sounds of muffled oarlocks
And swampings in lonely bays,
Surf crashing on unchristened shores,
And the wash of tiny snail shells in the
wandering gravel.
My body also is lost or wandering:
I know it,
As I cradle a pen, or walk down a stair
Holding a cup in my hand,
Not breaking into the pastures that lie in
the sunlight.
This sloth is far inside the body,
The sloth of the body lost among the
wandering stones of kindness.
Something homeless is looking on the long
roads,
A dog lost since midnight, a box-elder
Bug who doesn’t know
Its walls are gone, its house
Burnt. Even the young sun is lost,
Wandering over earth as the October
night comes down.
“Collected Poems 1948-1984â€
by Derek Walcott
(Farrar, Straus & Giroux).
Derek Walcott was born in St. Lucia, West Indies, in 1930. He now divides his time between Boston and Trinidad. Walcott’s first collection of poems was published in St. Lucia in 1948. Since then, he has published eight well-received collections addressing a wide variety of themes and issues--from ruminations upon love and literature in the West Indies to his thoughts on places he has traveled to--Wales, Rome, Cold Spring Harbor. Walcott’s verse reads as both lyrical and concrete, accessible and probing. His poems are as inviting as a door half ajar, opening to a warmly lit room from which emanates a hypnotic melody growing more complex with each variation on its theme.
Volcano
Joyce was afraid of thunder,
but lions roared at his funeral
from the Zurich zoo.
Was it Zurich or Trieste?
No matter. These are legends, as much
as the death of Joyce is a legend,
or the strong rumour that Conrad
is dead, and that Victory is ironic.
On the edge of the night-horizon
from this beach house on the cliffs
there are now, till dawn,
two glares from the miles-out-
at-sea derricks; they are like
the glow of the cigar
and the glow of the volcano
at Victory’ s end.
One could abandon writing
for the slow-burning signals
of the great, to be, instead,
their ideal reader, ruminative,
voracious, making the love of masterpieces
superior to attempting
to repeat or outdo them,
and be the greatest reader in the world.
At least it requires awe,
which has been lost to our time;
so many people have seen everything,
so many people can predict,
so many refuse to enter the silence
of victory, the indolence
that burns at the core,
so many are no more than
erect ash, like the cigar,
so many take thunder for granted.
How common is the lightning,
how lost the leviathans
we no longer look for!
There were giants in those days.
In those days they made good cigars.
I must read more carefully.
“Where the Water Comes Together With Other Waterâ€by Raymond Carver
(Vintage/Random House).
Raymond Carver’s gifts as a storyteller shine through his poetry, which he has been publishing alongside his fiction. Sometimes a Carver poem also works as a short story, with all its elements -- character, diction, place, event--compressed intact into the brevity of verse. And sometimes Carver delivers the goods in pure lyrical form, in words as full of yearning and sensibility as those of a very young man, but poems possessing the hard-won qualities of focus, stillness and irony only rewarded by experience.
Ask Him Reluctantly, my son goes with me
through the iron gates
of the cemetery in Montparnasse.
“What a way to spend a day in Paris!â€
is what he’d like to say. Did, in fact, say.
He speaks French. Has started a
conversation
with a white-haired guard who offers
himself
as our informal guide. So we move slowly,
the three of us, along row upon row of
graves.
Everyone, it seems, is here.
It’s quiet, and hot, and the street sounds
of Paris can’t reach. The guard wants to
steer us
to the grave of the man who invented the
submarine,
and Maurice Chevalier’s grave. And the
grave
of the 28-year-old singer, Nonnie,
covered with a mound of red roses.
I want to see the graves of the writers.
My son sighs. He doesn’t want to see
any of it.
Has seen enough. He’s passed beyond
boredom
into resignation. Guy de Maupassant;
Sartre; Sainte-Beuve;
Gautier; the Goncourts; Paul Verlaine and
his old comrade
Charles Baudelaire. Where we linger.
None of these names, or graves, have
anything to do
with the untroubled lives of my son and
the guard.
Who can this morning talk and joke
together
in the French language under a fine sun.
But there are several names chiseled on
Baudelaire’s stone,
and I can’t understand why.
Charles Baudelaire’s name is between that
of his mother,
who loaned him money and worried all her life
about his health, and his stepfather,
a martinet
he hated and who hated him and
everything he stood for.
. . . The guard says something and
then lays
one hand over the other. Like that. Does it
again. One hand over the other.
Grinning. Shrugging.
My son translates. But I understand.
“Like a sandwich, Pop,†my son says.
“A Baudelaire sandwich.â€
. . . “Ask him,†I say, “if he wants to be
buried
in this cemetery when he dies.
Ask him where he wants to be buried.â€
. . . He looks from one to the other of us.
Who are we kidding? Are we making a bad
joke?
He salutes and walks away.
Heading for a table at an outdoor cafe.
Where he can take off his cap, run his
fingers
through his hair. Hear laughter and voices.
The heavy clink of silverware. The ringing
of glasses. Sun on the windows.
Sun on the sidewalk and in the leaves.
Sun finding its way onto his table. His
glass. His hands.
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