Imperfect Recall
Christopher Hitchens, in the April 2005 issue of Poetry magazine, on the Poetry Foundation website:
…the first true poet I ever met was James Fenton, who was my contemporary at Oxford. He had won early fame and a prize for a sonnet sequence, but he was forever composing bits of blues, along with parodies and what he sometimes called “rude songs.” This proved to be equally true, as I got older and got to know them, of Robert Conquest and Kingsley Amis. A preferred form was the limerick, of which I still have a hundred or so hard-wired into my cortex in case of need (or opportunity). Not all these need be filthy—I have a special reserve of clean ones, some without even a double entendre—but all of them do need to follow a certain simple but exacting scheme. It depresses me beyond measure that most people I meet cannot even recite, much less compose, this gem-like form. Nor can any student in any of my English classes produce a single sonnet of Shakespeare: not even to get themselves laid (the original purpose of the project).
I worry that by phrasing things in this way I may myself be adding to the general coarsening and deafness. Of course my test isn’t the one true test: who can safely say that they have memorized Don Juan, for instance? But then who could you count as reliable who could not manage a stave or two of The Waste Land? The word “Koran” means “the recitation,” and it seems that in Arabic its incantation can induce trance by sheer power and beauty. (Auden was wrong, in his valediction for Yeats, to say that “poetry makes nothing happen.”) At least this restores the idea of a relationship to the theoretically divine, and to the audience. (Auden also wrote of Yeats that “mad Ireland hurt you into poetry,” which at any rate implies the possibility of a reciprocal relationship between poetry and the reality of which Eliot believed that “human kind” could not bear too much.)
Yet very often, late at night, when I am not tired enough for sleep but too tired to carry on with absorbing or apprehending anything “serious” or new, I will walk over to the appropriate shelf and pull out the tried and the true: the ones that never fail me. And then I will always stay up even later than I had intended. And sometimes, in the morning, I really can “do” the whole of “Spain 1937” or “The Road to Mandalay,” and can appreciate that writing is not just done by hand.
via Boston Review’s Facebook
