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Coming to Age

Page 7

by Carolyn Hopley


  that the rows of sunken horseshoe pits

  with their rusty stakes, grown over with grass,

  were like old graves, but I was not letting

  my thoughts go there. Instead I was looking

  with hope to a grapevine draped over

  a fence in a neighboring yard, and knowing

  that I could hold on. Yes, that was I.

  And that was I, the round-shouldered man

  you saw that afternoon in Rising City

  as you drove past the abandoned Mini Golf,

  fists deep in my pockets, nose dripping,

  as I walked the miniature Main Street

  peering into the child-size plywood store,

  the poor red school, the faded barn, thinking

  that not even in such an abbreviated world

  with no more than its little events—the snap

  of a grasshopper’s wing against a paper cup—

  could a person control this life. Yes, that was I.

  And that was I you spotted that evening

  just before dark, in a weedy cemetery

  west of Staplehurst, down on one knee

  as if trying to make out the name on a stone,

  some lonely old man, you thought, come there

  to pity himself in a reliable sadness

  of grass among graves, but that was not so.

  Instead I had found in its perfect web

  a handsome black and yellow spider

  pumping its legs to try to shake my footing

  as if I were a gift, an enormous moth

  that it could snare and eat. Yes, that was I.

  Ted Kooser

  AFTER LONG SILENCE

  Speech after long silence; it is right,

  All other lovers being estranged or dead,

  Unfriendly lamplight hid under its shade,

  The curtains drawn upon unfriendly night,

  That we descant and yet again descant

  Upon the supreme theme of Art and Song:

  Bodily decrepitude is wisdom; young

  We loved each other and were ignorant.

  W. B. Yeats

  I DREAMED THAT I WAS OLD

  I dreamed that I was old: in stale declension

  Fallen from my prime, when company

  Was mine, cat-nimbleness, and green invention,

  Before time took my leafy hours away.

  My wisdom, ripe with body’s ruin, found

  Itself tart recompense for what was lost

  In false exchange: since wisdom in the ground

  Has no apocalypse or pentecost.

  I wept for my youth, sweet passionate young thought,

  And cozy women dead that by my side

  Once lay: I wept with bitter longing, not

  Remembering how in my youth I cried.

  Stanley Kunitz

  Mourning one’s lost youth is a familiar poetic trope. Late wisdom matters little; the cost of age weighs on the poet with no apparent compensatory gain. But then comes the final line.

  “Apocalypse” and “pentecost” are biblical terms. “Apocalypse” means the complete and final destruction of the world, as described in the New Testament Book of Revelation. “Pentecost” is the Christian celebration of the descent of the Holy Spirit on the apostles.

  CARPE DIEM

  Age saw two quiet children

  Go loving by at twilight,

  He knew not whether homeward,

  Or outward from the village,

  Or (chimes were ringing) churchward.

  He waited (they were strangers)

  Till they were out of hearing

  To bid them both be happy.

  “Be happy, happy, happy,

  And seize the day of pleasure.”

  The age-long theme is Age’s.

  ’Twas Age imposed on poems

  Their gather-roses burden

  To warn against the danger

  That overtaken lovers

  From being overflooded

  With happiness should have it

  And yet not know they have it.

  But bid life seize the present?

  It lives less in the present

  Than in the future always,

  And less in both together

  Than in the past. The present

  Is too much for the senses,

  Too crowding, too confusing—

  Too present to imagine.

  Robert Frost

  Seize the day! We are constantly urged to live in the present moment. All well and good in theory, says Frost, but in reality impossible since the present overwhelms us. Virginia Woolf puts it this way: “The past is beautiful because one never realises an emotion at the time. It expands later, and thus we don’t have complete emotions about the present, only about the past” (The Diary of Virginia Woolf, Volume 3: 1925–1930).

  THEY

  I see you down there, white-haired

  among the green leaves,

  picking the ripe raspberries,

  and I think, “Forty-two years!”

  We are the you and I who were

  once the they whom we remember.

  Wendell Berry

  The grand mystery of time and aging is expressed succinctly in this small gem of a poem whose colors—white and green and red—flash before our eyes.

  WHY SHOULD NOT OLD MEN BE MAD?

  Why should not old men be mad?

  Some have known a likely lad

  That had a sound fly-fisher’s wrist

  Turn to a drunken journalist;

  A girl that knew all Dante once

  Live to bear children to a dunce;

  A Helen of social welfare dream

  Climb on a wagonette to scream.

  Some think it a matter of course that chance

  Should starve good men and bad advance,

  That if their neighbours figured plain,

  As though upon a lighted screen,

  No single story would they find

  Of an unbroken happy mind,

  A finish worthy of the start.

  Young men know nothing of this sort,

  Observant old men know it well;

  And when they know what old books tell,

  And that no better can be had,

  Know why an old man should be mad.

  W. B. Yeats

  FORGETFULNESS

  The name of the author is the first to go

  followed obediently by the title, the plot,

  the heartbreaking conclusion, the entire novel

  which suddenly becomes one you have never read, never even heard of,

  as if, one by one, the memories you used to harbor

  decided to retire to the southern hemisphere of the brain,

  to a little fishing village where there are no phones.

  Long ago you kissed the names of the nine Muses goodbye

  and watched the quadratic equation pack its bag,

  and even now as you memorize the order of the planets,

  something else is slipping away, a state flower perhaps,

  the address of an uncle, the capital of Paraguay.

  Whatever it is you are struggling to remember,

  it is not poised on the tip of your tongue,

  not even lurking in some obscure corner of your spleen.

  It has floated away down a dark mythological river

  whose name begins with an L as far as you can recall

  well on your own way to oblivion where you will join those

  who have even forgotten how to swim and how to ride a bicycle.

  No wonder you rise in the middle of the night

  to look up the date of a famous battle in a book on war.

  No wonder the moon in the window seems to have drifted

  out of a love poem that you used to know by heart.

  Billy Collins

  In this description of the slow slippage of memory, there is some comfort in knowing we have the delightful company of Collins
on the slide.

  THERE’S THE RUB

  Envying young poets the rage

  You wish you could reverse your night

  And blaze out born on every page

  As old as them, as debut-bright.

  Child of that prodigal spotlight

  Whose wattage now is theirs to wage—

  What gold star rite you wish you might

  Raise revised to its first prize stage.

  But listen to my wizened sage:

  He claims there’s one disadvantage

  Should time renew you neophyte—

  There’d be one catch you’d hate, one spite:

  Remember if you were their age

  You’d have to write the way they write.

  Bill Knott

  Each generation creates its own vocabulary, its own currency. And each generation is in thrall to the language of its time.

  YOUTH AND AGE

  I remember when I was little and the world was great

  A storm crashed the trees, lightnings vociferated,

  Dark horror darkened the house, we descended

  To the cellar in cold fear, in stupefying dread,

  In wordless terror. I clung to the skirts of my mother.

  Now I am old, and life continues, time is small.

  Facing whatever may bring the end of the world

  I have no better answer, now than then—

  Blind clutches against the force of nature,

  A wild glimpse, and poetry.

  Richard Eberhart

  Fearful of what the future may bring, both to himself and to the planet, the poet turns to poetry as a bulwark against despair.

  WITH AGE WISDOM

  At twenty, stooping round about,

  I thought the world a miserable place,

  Truth a trick, faith in doubt,

  Little beauty, less grace.

  Now at sixty what I see,

  Although the world is worse by far,

  Stops my heart in ecstasy.

  God, the wonders that there are!

  Archibald MacLeish

  After serving in World War I, MacLeish believed that the conflict marked the ending of an old order and the beginning of a new, a hope that resulted in disappointment. This small poem may act as a reminder of the change of perspective that age can bring, whatever the current state of the world.

  8

  “A SOLACE OF RIPE PLUMS”

  By the time we have reached the proverbial three score and ten and counting, even the most fortunate among us have known stress and sorrow. At these times, assailed by events outside ourselves or demons within, we cast about for sources of consolation that can support and sustain us.

  Among these sources is poetry. Poets who have found themselves in similar situations write in ways that connect to our own experience and may provide an expansion of our own understanding. It may be as simple as the taste of a ripe plum in William Carlos Williams’s poem or as counterintuitive as the “banalities” of a poor island town as seen by Derek Walcott. To sit with a friend and read poems aloud to each other is a wonderful way to cope with a gray day.

  Humor especially can lift us out of self-pity and depression; never discount the power of laughter, even in the hardest times. Thus we begin this section with two poems that, even as they deal with weighty matters, do so in a lighthearted style.

  QUIET

  Prolonged exposure to death

  Has made my friend quieter.

  Now his nose is less like a hatchet

  And more like a snuffler.

  Flames don’t erupt from his mouth anymore

  And life doesn’t crack his thermometer.

  Instead of overthrowing the government

  He reads fly-fishing catalogues

  And takes photographs of water.

  An aphorist would say

  The horns of the steer have grown straighter.

  He has an older heart

  That beats younger.

  His Attila the Hun imitation

  Is not as good as it used to be.

  Everything else is better.

  Tony Hoagland

  A FINISHED MAN

  Of the four louts who threw him off the dock

  Three are now dead, and so more faintly mock

  The way he choked and splashed and was afraid.

  His memory of the fourth begins to fade.

  It was himself whom he could not forgive;

  Yet it has been a comfort to outlive

  That woman, stunned by his appalling gaffe,

  Who with a napkin half-suppressed her laugh,

  Or that grey colleague, surely gone by now,

  Who, turning toward the window, raised his brow,

  Embarrassed to have caught him in a lie.

  All witness darkens, eye by dimming eye.

  Thus he can walk today with heart at ease

  Through the old quad, escorted by trustees,

  To dedicate the monumental gym

  A grateful college means to name for him.

  Seated, he feels the warm sun sculpt his cheek

  As the young president gets up to speak.

  If the dead die, if he can but forget,

  If money talks, he may be perfect yet.

  Richard Wilbur

  PROVIDE, PROVIDE

  The witch that came (the withered hag)

  To wash the steps with pail and rag

  Was once the beauty Abishag,

  The picture pride of Hollywood.

  Too many fall from great and good

  For you to doubt the likelihood.

  Die early and avoid the fate.

  Or if predestined to die late,

  Make up your mind to die in state.

  Make the whole stock exchange your own!

  If need be occupy a throne,

  Where nobody can call you crone.

  Some have relied on what they knew,

  Others on simply being true.

  What worked for them might work for you.

  No memory of having starred

  Atones for later disregard

  Or keeps the end from being hard.

  Better to go down dignified

  With boughten friendship at your side

  Than none at all. Provide, provide!

  Robert Frost

  Frost’s wry New England voice comes through here in this satirical prescription for dealing with the inevitable losses of old age.

  Abishag was the young beauty chosen to serve the biblical king and psalmist David in his old age. Among her duties was to lie next to him in bed in order to keep him warm.

  COUNTRY STARS

  The nearsighted child has taken off her glasses

  and come downstairs to be kissed goodnight.

  She blows on a black windowpane until it’s white.

  Over the apple trees a great bear passes

  but she puts her own construction on the night.

  Two cities, a chemical plant, and clotted cars

  breathe our distrust of darkness on the air,

  clouding the pane between us and the stars.

  But have no fear, or only proper fear:

  the bright watchers are still there.

  William Meredith

  This poem was published in 1976. Since then the world has undergone cataclysmic changes. What now is “proper fear”?

  WHY WE MUST STRUGGLE

  If we have not struggled

  as hard as we can

  at our strongest

  how will we sense

  the shape of our losses

  or know what sustains

  us longest or name

  what change costs us,

  saying how strange

  it is that one sector

  of the self can step in

  for another in trouble,

  how loss activates

  a latent double, how

  we can feed

  as upon nectar

  upon need?

/>   Kay Ryan

  ALLEGRO

  After a black day, I play Haydn,

  and feel a little warmth in my hands.

  The keys are ready. Kind hammers fall.

  The sound is spirited, green, and full of silence.

  The sound says that freedom exists

  and someone pays no tax to Caesar.

  I shove my hands in my haydnpockets

  and act like a man who is calm about it all.

  I raise my haydnflag. The signal is:

  “We do not surrender. But want peace.”

  The music is a house of glass standing on a slope;

  rocks are flying, rocks are rolling.

  The rocks roll straight through the house

  but every pane of glass is still whole.

  Tomas Tranströmer

  (translated from the Swedish by Robert Bly)

  Music can reach us in our deepest being, even in times of greatest despair. Tranströmer suffered a paralytic stroke in 1990 and lost his power of speech, but went on writing poetry until his death twenty-five years later.

  TO A POOR OLD WOMAN

  munching a plum on

  the street a paper bag

  of them in her hand

  They taste good to her

  They taste good

  to her. They taste

  good to her

  You can see it by

  the way she gives herself

  to the one half

  sucked out in her hand

  Comforted

  a solace of ripe plums

  seeming to fill the air

  They taste good to her

  William Carlos Williams

  CONSOLATION

  How agreeable it is not to be touring Italy this summer,

  wandering her cities and ascending her torrid hill towns.

  How much better to cruise these local, familiar streets,

  fully grasping the meaning of every road sign and billboard

  and all the sudden hand gestures of my compatriots.

  There are no abbeys here, no crumbling frescoes or famous

  domes and there is no need to memorize a succession

  of kings or tour the dripping corners of a dungeon.

 

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