Date: Thu, 17 Sep 1998 21:16:23 -0700
To: <raudra9@hotmail.com>
From: elisa vandernoot <elisav@wiesenthal.com> (by way of Jack Kolb
<KOLB@ucla.edu>) (by way of Jack Kolb <KOLB@ucla.edu>) Save Address Block Sender
Subject: Poetic giant with his feet on the ground
The Times: Features
September 11 1998
Poetic giant with his feet on the ground
Seamus Heaney celebrates 30 years of poetry with a new selection. Interview
by Erica Wagner
Seamus Heaney: "Lyric poetry is a matter of constant hope, but there have to
be little projects to keep you going"
Photograph: DES JENSON
It has been said that he is the only poet capable of writing a love poem
comparing the beloved to a skunk; perhaps he is also the only one who could
make the answer to the question "what's your favourite colour?" interesting.
That question was shouted from the audience last Sunday night when Heaney
read from the latest selection of his work, Opened Ground, to a packed
Piccadilly Theatre.
There was a thoughtful pause as the question settled in, and then: "Green,"
he said, laughing himself, and making us laugh. For his inclusion in the
1982 Penguin Book of Contemporary British Poetry, he had rebuked its
editors, Andrew Motion and Blake Morrison: ". . . be advised my passport's
green./ No glass of ours was ever raised/ To toast the queen." But his
follow-up on Sunday had no political tint: "One favourite image of mine is
the planet Earth seen from the astronaut's perspective; that wavery ovum
that is our Earth is very moving. I could make an ideological defence of
green . . ." - and his voice trails off into laughter again.
There are some who hold this trailing off against him. Heaney is now nearly
60. For more than 30 years, since the publication of his first book, Death
of A Naturalist, in 1966, he has risen from being a talented young poet, a
Catholic Ulsterman and son of a Co Derry farmer to his present stature of
poetic giant of his generation: he has been Professor of Poetry at Oxford,
Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory at Harvard, and is now Ralph
Waldo Emerson Poet in Residence at Harvard, a post held by Robert Frost and
Robert Lowell before him. And then there is the 1995 Nobel Prize for Literature.
His early rise, paralleling the growth of conflict in his native Northern
Ireland, led many to expect him to take sides, to speak out: his reluctance
to do so explicitly in his work has not met universal approval. When we
meet, in the airy boardroom of his publishers, Faber & Faber, I ask if this
is one of the difficulties of the lyric poet: balancing the beauty and
pleasure of the work with the harshness of the subjects that come into the
poet's line of sight. "I don't think the political presents itself to you as
a writer as, in inverted commas, the political," he says.
His voice is soft and deep, his eyes narrow behind his glasses. He speaks
easily in the kind of coherent paragraphs that most writers would be happy
to produce after several revisions. "The Robert Frost description of a poem,
which I've quoted and quoted, seems to me to be simply true: a momentary
stay against confusion. Maybe sometimes you will find a way of saying
something that will keep the confusion momentarily at bay. 'It's a bit like
this.' The same with 'The Northern Ireland question'" - he lowers his voice,
mock-ponderous. "The way in is usually not a triumphal arch but a kind of
mousehole, or by Ariadne's thread: something reliable but very small.
"I think lyric poetry in the face of historic reality does depend on the
utterly frail - but the utterly frail is often the most sensitive register.
If you ponder the minuscule artistic evidence for the awful volume of
reality represented by the First World War, it tells you that lyric poetry
is a very strange and rare instrument and that you can't expect a
proportional yield between historical trauma and artistic yield."
The truth is that Heaney's poems deepen beyond politics or conflict. North,
published in 1975, is laced with images of the "bog people", those eerily
preserved bodies found in peat bogs, victims of violent and mysterious
deaths. They refract, rather than reflect, the conflict in Northern Ireland.
Roy Foster, Carroll Professor of Irish History at Oxford and the biographer
of Yeats, says that when he first read those poems he thought: "So it can be
written about, and this is how you write about it. I felt that something had
been liberated. He confronts the issue with propriety and dignity which is
worthy of him. To be a heart-on-your sleeve poet on that issue is to
trivialise both the issue and yourself."
Poetry, not politics, is Heaney's business. Opened Ground is a selection of
his work from his beginnings to the present - his last grand selection was
made nearly ten years ago. On its cover is a little image which he first
spotted in Simon Schama's An Embarrassment of Riches, a Hieronymus Bosch
detail of a little naked child, who may be the infant Christ, with a
spinning toy in his hand. It's clear that he loves the image, and the choice
of it sheds an angled light on the way he now views his work: "The complete
freedom of it attracted me, and the slightly scampish quality of baby Jesus
in His pelt with what my mother would have called His little teapot!
Perfectly poised, y'know? And there was something about the whirligig, the
lightness of it, that goes with the account I had given of my own poetry
that's printed there [the Nobel lecture, Crediting Poetry]. This guy's about
lightening up, in a way. And true to the idea that the child is the father
of the man . . . it doesn't have an immediate symbolic import. The thing is
just itself, but if you pause with it, it can be read."
The same is true of Heaney's poetry, at its best: the thing is just itself,
but if you pause with it, it can be read. It is this apparent expression of
things and places as just themselves that is most remarkable about his work.
"The best Heaney allows intelligence to remain within the organic forms he
evokes, rather than stepping back," says fellow poet Andrew Motion. Citing
Keats, he says: "We hate poetry that has a palpable design on us." Heaney is
strongest when he resists the temptation to tell us, within a poem, what it
means.
That scampish quality is in Heaney, too: in his refusal to take himself too
seriously, his occasional terrible pun (of a love poem written for his wife
Marie, called The Otter, he says: "It's about 'the otter half'," and grins
apologetically), his willingness to embrace the youthful curiosity about the
world that kept him with his ear close to the radio when he was growing up,
the eldest of nine children, on his father's farm. "The image I have now of
my life is of ripples moving out, which encompass more the older you get and
the further you go, both intellectually and physically - and that which is
doing the encompassing is an extension of your first being.
"I like the sense that at the centre there's still that child with the
whirligig, running, but he knows more in one way. At a certain point you
satisfy your curiosity about the world, you try to learn and then you
realise that nobody can help. You're left with yourself. This is the
terrible thing, that you can then turn into yourself - that is the danger,
when you become confident and a figure: that you turn the last ripple into a
fortification."
There seems little danger of that, despite his awareness that he is
considered "a figure", worrying that his work is overexamined: "I am
grateful, but I must forget it," he says. His work in The Spirit Level, his
last volume of new poems published just after he won the prize he can hardly
bring himself to name, is limber, sensuous, exact. Now he has nearly
completed a translation of Beowulf - an exact translation, to be used as a
parallel text by students: "None of your fancy stuff, none of your versions,
none of your Christopher Logues," he says ruefully, comparing the work to
"breaking stones for pleasure".
Once Beowulf is finished, he says: "I have a notion. Of something I'll
write. Lyric poetry is a matter of constant hope: but there have to be
little projects, too, to keep yourself going." He once said he was tempted
to call a volume of poems Keeping Going: he may have held back from that,
but we may all be glad that keeping going is just what he intends to do.
Postscript appears in Opened Ground, published by Faber & Faber, priced L20
and L12.99 (paperback).
Postscript
And some time make the time to drive out west
Into County Clare, along the Flaggy Shore,
In September or October, when the wind
And the light are working off each other
So that the ocean on one side is wild
With foam and glitter, and inland among stones
The surface of a slate-grey lake is lit
By the earthed lightning of a flock of swans,
Their feathers roughed and ruffling, white on white,
Their fully grown headstrong-looking heads
Tucked or cresting or busy underwater.
Useless to think you'll park and capture it
More thoroughly. You are neither here nor there,
A hurry through which known and strange things pass
As big soft buffetings come at the car sideways
And catch the heart off guard and blow it open.
Copyright 1998 Times Newspapers Ltd.
ReplyReply AllForwardDeletePreviousNextClose
(Move to Selected Folder)
In-Box
Sent Messages
Drafts
Trash Can
engines
irish-list
mousetrap
tfnoonan
to_do
Click here for more information.
© 1996-1998 Hotmail. All Rights Reserved.