Week 600: The Performance, by James Dickey

James Dickey (1923-1997) was an American poet and novelist who served as a radar operator in the Pacific during the Second World War. This week’s poem relates an incident from that war.

For once I’ll put my comments at the end, to avoid a major spoiler, so please read the poem first and form your own opinions.

The Performance

The last time I saw Donald Armstrong   
He was staggering oddly off into the sun,   
Going down, off the Philippine Islands.   
I let my shovel fall, and put that hand
Above my eyes, and moved some way to one side
That his body might pass through the sun,

And I saw how well he was not
Standing there on his hands,
On his spindle-shanked forearms balanced,   
Unbalanced, with his big feet looming and waving   
In the great, untrustworthy air
He flew in each night, when it darkened.

Dust fanned in scraped puffs from the earth
Between his arms, and blood turned his face inside out,   
To demonstrate its suppleness
Of veins, as he perfected his role.
Next day, he toppled his head off
On an island beach to the south,

And the enemy’s two-handed sword   
Did not fall from anyone’s hands   
At that miraculous sight,
As the head rolled over upon
Its wide-eyed face, and fell
Into the inadequate grave

He had dug for himself, under pressure.   
Yet I put my flat hand to my eyebrows   
Months later, to see him again
In the sun, when I learned how he died,   
And imagined him, there,
Come, judged, before his small captors,

Doing all his lean tricks to amaze them—
The back somersault, the kip-up—
And at last, the stand on his hands,   
Perfect, with his feet together,
His head down, evenly breathing,
As the sun poured from the sea

And the headsman broke down   
In a blaze of tears, in that light   
Of the thin, long human frame   
Upside down in its own strange joy,
And, if some other one had not told him,   
Would have cut off the feet

Instead of the head,
And if Armstrong had not presently risen   
In kingly, round-shouldered attendance,   
And then knelt down in himself
Beside his hacked, glittering grave, having done   
All things in this life that he could.

James Dickey

For me this poem is a real problem. When I first read it I thought it accomplished, moving, inspirational even. Then I came across a piece by a critic who had done some fact-checking. It turned out that the whole thing was pretty much made up. There had been a pilot called Donald Armstrong, but he had simply died in the crash. Another pilot with him had indeed been beheaded by the Japanese, but there had been no ‘performance’, no heroic gymnastics – that was something Dickey himself liked to do around camp, and he had simply projected it on to the situation in a kind of narcissistic wish fulfilment. I felt shocked and betrayed. But why, exactly? After all, we know that most of literature is ‘made up’. We don’t expect there to have been a real Odysseus who took ten years to get home after the Trojan War. We know Dante didn’t really get a guided tour of hell in the company of Virgil. We would not be perturbed to learn that the only pilgrimage Chaucer ever made to Canterbury was in his imagination, and we happily accept that Shakespeare’s ‘Macbeth’ is a gross slander on the real king of that name who apparently ruled wisely and well for many years. In short, we normally accept the principle of ‘Si non è vero, è ben trovato’ – it may not be true, but it makes a good story.

So why do I feel that Dickey’s falsification of the facts in this case is such a letdown? I think it is because one feels it as a violation of trust, that in this instance so much hinges on the events described being literally true that if they aren’t, then what’s the point of it all? I don’t mind poets making honest mistakes. Larkin beat himself up about ‘An Arundel Tomb’ because he quite unintentionally misremembered or misinterpreted a few details. ‘Everything went wrong with that poem: I got the hands wrong – it’s right-hand gauntlet really – and anyway the hands were a nineteenth-century addition, not pre-Baroque at all’. I can live with that, and still admire the poem. But if you’re just going to take real people and real events and make stuff up about them for effect, then maybe you’ve chosen the wrong vocation and should be in politics, not poetry.

And yet, and yet… the poem still moves me. It is very confusing. Should I simply accept Dickey’s own view that there is nothing wrong in letting imagination prevail over veracity? What does anyone think?

Week 599: The Winged Horse, by Hilaire Belloc

Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953; see also weeks 112 and 263) was a rambunctious, opinionated, larger than life figure whose reputation has suffered partly due to his oft expressed dislike of Jews, though it should be said that he abominated Hitler and totally condemned Nazi anti-semitism. Nor was he alone among intellectuals at the time in holding problematic views: T.S.Eliot’s anti-semitic streak has not stopped him from being venerated in certain quarters, nor has H.G.Wells’s enthusiasm for culling non-white races in the name of eugenics inhibited a continuing interest in his fiction. So maybe Belloc too deserves to be cut some slack, and perhaps anyway we should be wary of demonising writers for one unacceptable opinion and should simply reject that opinion while seeing what else they might have to offer. Which in Belloc’s case, as far as poetry goes, is a quantity of skilful, entertaining and sometimes quite edgy light verse, and some pieces like this which hover somewhere between the light and the serious.

Apparently this particular poem was written in reaction to his failure to obtain a fellowship at All Souls College, Oxford, and expresses a defiant scorn for the academia that has rejected him. It seems odd to me that a poet should wish to compromise his independence of mind by too close an assocation with an academic institution, but evidently it was a lifelong disappointment to him. The poem is a bit of a romantic muddle – I would like to know just how high you would have to fly a winged horse to see the English Channel from anywhere near Wantage, and I’m not sure what the cast of the ‘Chanson de Roland’ are doing on the nearby Lambourn Downs – it’s a long way from Roncesvalles. But you have to admit it goes with a swing.

The Winged Horse: this is a reference to Pegasus, the winged horse of Greek mythology, ridden by the hero Bellephoron who defeated the monster Chimaera. The point here is that Pegasus is said to have created the spring Hippocrene on Mount Helicon by striking his hoof in the earth, and drinking from the Hippocrene was thought to bring poetic inspiration, which ties in with ‘spouting well of joy’ in the last stanza.

Lambourn: a town in Berkshire famous as a centre for the training of racehorses, which are exercised on the nearby downs.

Roland: hero of the 11th century Old French epic poem ‘Chanson de Roland’, which is very loosely based on a real historical 8th century incident. In the poem the French emperor Charlemagne is leading his army back from Spain when its rearguard, under the command of his champion Count Roland, is ambushed in a narrow Pyrenean pass by a large army of Saracens (in reality it was a small army of Basques). Not wanting to be thought a coward, Roland refuses to summon help by blowing his horn, despite the repeated urgings of his friend Oliver (‘Cumpaign Rolland, car sunez vostre corn’, which I like to translate as ‘For f—k’s sake, Roland, just blow the bloody horn!’). As a result the entire rearguard is wiped out, with Roland the last to fall.

Marches: here used in the sense of borderlands – the historical Roland was military governor of the Breton March, responsible for defending Francia‘s frontier against the Bretons.

Turpin: a martial archbishop who fell with Roland, the last of his companions to do so. It may seem odd that a churchman should also be a doughty warrior, but it is well attested that among William the Conqueror’s retinue at the Battle of Hastings was a certain Bishop Odo. There is a story, possibly apocryphal, that as his calling forbade him to shed blood, he eschewed the use of a sword and instead bashed people’s brains in with a club. So that was all right.

The Winged Horse

It’s ten years ago today you turned me out o’ doors
To cut my feet on flinty lands and stumble down the shores
And I thought about the all-in-all, oh more than I can tell!
But I caught a horse to ride upon and I rode him very well,
He had flames behind the eyes of him and wings upon his side,
And I ride, and I ride!

I rode him out of Wantage and I rode him up the hill,
And there I saw the Beacon in the morning standing still,
Inkpen and Hackpen and southward and away
High through the middle airs in the strengthening of the day,
And there I saw the channel-glint and England in her pride
And I ride, and I ride!

And once atop of Lambourn Down towards the hill of Clere
I saw the Host of Heaven in rank and Michael with his spear,
And Turpin out of Gascony and Charlemagne the Lord
And Roland of the marches with his hand upon his sword
For the time he should have need of it, and forty more beside
And I ride, and I ride!

For you that took the all-in-all, the things you left were three,
A loud voice for singing and keen eyes to see
And a spouting well of joy that never yet was dried
And I ride.

Hilaire Belloc

Week 598: Love After Love, by Derek Walcott

Another of Derek Walcott’s intriguing shorter lyrics, this one apparently on the theme of finding peace and healing after a failed relationship, or perhaps more than one failed relationship (Walcott was divorced three times), by learning to embrace oneself rather than another, and thus at last becoming self-sufficient in one’s own identity.

Looked at from this angle, the sentiment of the poem seems debatable. Surely if there is one thing that most of us, and perhaps especially poets, are not short on it is self-love, and maybe those failed relationships wouldn’t fail so readily were it not so.

But there may be another way of interpreting the poem. The fact is that poets, perhaps more than most of us, live with the perpetual fret of not having world enough and time, to love all that they would wish to love and be all that they would wish to be, and I think these lines can also be taken as a reassurance that this state of self-dissatisfaction can have an end, that there may wait for us a final contentment, a time to reap what we have sown. ‘Sit. Feast on your life.’ Well, it’s a nice idea. Me, I’m still fretting.

Love After Love

The time will come
when, with elation
you will greet yourself arriving
at your own door, in your own mirror
and each will smile at the other’s welcome,

and say, sit here. Eat.
You will love again the stranger who was your self.
Give wine. Give bread. Give back your heart
to itself, to the stranger who has loved you

all your life, whom you ignored
for another, who knows you by heart.
Take down the love letters from the bookshelf,

the photographs, the desperate notes,
peel your own image from the mirror.
Sit. Feast on your life.

Derek Walcott

Week 597: Filling Station, by Elizabeth Bishop

It’s an unlikely conjunction, but this poem by the American poet Elizabeth Bishop (1911-1979) puts me in mind of Patrick Kavanagh, the man whose credo was ‘Nothing whatever is by love debarred’. A garage forecourt, just like Kavanagh’s chest hospital, seems an unlikely place in which to find poetry, but I guess that if you bring to the business a kind of universal empathy, a reverence for the fact, then anything is possible.

Note how the poem moves from a tone of apparent disdain, albeit mingled with fascination, to a final humbling realisation that here too a spirit of love is at work, expressing itself in the family’s valiant efforts to add homely touches to their challenging and work-impregnated environment.

I won’t say that I exactly like this poem – in fact I feel a strong urge to clean my hands with Swarfega after reading it – but I have to admire a poet so prepared to boldly go where few if any have gone before her.

Filling Station

Oh, but it is dirty!
—this little filling station,
oil-soaked, oil-permeated
to a disturbing, over-all
black translucency.
Be careful with that match!

Father wears a dirty,
oil-soaked monkey suit
that cuts him under the arms,
and several quick and saucy
and greasy sons assist him
(it’s a family filling station),
all quite thoroughly dirty.

Do they live in the station?
It has a cement porch
behind the pumps, and on it
a set of crushed and grease-
impregnated wickerwork;
on the wicker sofa
a dirty dog, quite comfy.

Some comic books provide
the only note of color—
of certain color. They lie
upon a big dim doily
draping a taboret
(part of the set), beside
a big hirsute begonia.

Why the extraneous plant?
Why the taboret?
Why, oh why, the doily?
(Embroidered in daisy stitch
with marguerites, I think,
and heavy with gray crochet.)

Somebody embroidered the doily.
Somebody waters the plant,
or oils it, maybe. Somebody
arranges the rows of cans
so that they softly say:
esso—so—so—so
to high-strung automobiles.
Somebody loves us all.

Elizabeth Bishop