This year I don’t even feel like Halloween - and lots of horror movies … I am in low spirits and somehow cannot look as high as something like “Shakespeare” to build them up again. But I desperately need something to get out of the dullness of endless repetition even of occupations I like … and may have found it.
Last Sunday I was sitting with Claudia on my balcony - in the sunshine! - eating home-made apple pie (which surprisingly had turned out great. I cook, but I NEVER bake, therefore ... and I forgot to take a picture! 😞!) and we were talking about Brexit, the impending lock-down, and worse. Desperately groping for something uplifting (apart from the pie), I reported that I had bought "Classic Love Poems" read by Richard Armitage on Audible, but it didn't download properly so that I can't listen to them when I am not online. And I always forget when I am online ... Therefore: more 😞!
But I find it difficult to listen to poems anyway … “Yes”, she answered, “me too, because you always have to take text structure into consideration.” “Oh, I don’t think it is that,” I said, “It’s what I like. It is that I have to activate so much of MY OWN emotional stuff.”
Now I don’t think that this was a hundred percent honest answer – though it was what struck me at that moment. I think it is both. We always take text structure into consideration, I believe, one way or the other, when we are reading fiction. We are not CONTENT when it looks or feels anything like “real life”. I noticed this once, when I saw this French film adaptation of “Une Vie” by Guy de Maupassant which appeared to consist solely of uniform wide shots. I noticed that this was the main reason it was such a bad, boring film (- though it strikes me now that it MIGHT have been an aesthetic decision! A bad one nonetheless.) “We” just NOTICE the absence of structure and structural choices so seldom because we avidly take any kind of structure we can find and “feed” on it = make aesthetical sense of it. But we do this mostly subconsciously. The first big thing about poetry is what Claudia said: that we are compelled to take structure into conscious consideration. And this is always some kind of inhibition, or hurdle to climb over. In my terminology, poetry is fictional text with a VISIBLE text vortex. (Though “visible”, strictly speaking, is a metaphor. It would be audible, most of the time, if we read it aloud …) The reason why poetry is so intense and demanding is probably both. We have to be so much more active – and precise! – both on an aesthetical and an emotional level.
I think we were mostly on the same plane about this, though, because Claudia said that, even though she rarely reads poetry, she remembers the three poems that struck her to the core. I immediately thought: I know that this can happen but don’t remember that it has ever happened to me - and instantly felt inferior. But would she tell me which poems they were? She did, and I was awestruck because, just in a couple of minutes, she told me exactly about each bit of poetry and her reaction to it – including a recitation of the relevant passages from the poems!
I won’t try to repeat this here. I couldn’t anyway, and I won’t even paraphrase it because it is partly extremely personal stuff. But I was totally delighted to find three entirely DIFFERENT reactions to poetry related to me in a way that I instantly RECOGNIZED them – even though, to my knowledge, I had never HAD them myself … ??? But I might just have forgotten so much about my “past lives” …
The first was a short poem by Sarah Kirsch which I don’t quote (- it’s completely heartbreaking and, of course, in German) and that kind of fell like a bombshell into a situation of personal distress and expressed this situation as no other kind of comment ever could. I have been thinking a lot, implicitly, that one of my most important reasons for reading – which appear to be like some kind of cluster with lots of the bits playing into each other - probably is to find CONSOLATION. It is seldom or never that strong but it is always there. And in some situations – probably most really bad situations! – we cannot find it in other people because, at that moment, we are feeling so strongly and the other person doesn’t feel anything. So, even though the poem makes the feeling stronger and, therefore, worse, it ultimately makes it better because, at the bottom of this, there must be this other human being that has been through the same and understands me!
The second one was a long, lyrical poem which is telling us about a voyage and basically says the same as the adage: “The journey is your reward”:
As you set out for Ithaka
hope your road is a long one,
full of adventure, full of discovery.
(…)
Hope your road is a long one.
May there be many summer mornings when,
with what pleasure, what joy,
you enter harbors you’re seeing for the first time;
may you stop at Phoenician trading stations
to buy fine things,
mother of pearl and coral, amber and ebony,
sensual perfume of every kind—
as many sensual perfumes as you can;
and may you visit many Egyptian cities
to learn and go on learning from their scholars.
Keep Ithaka always in your mind.
Arriving there is what you’re destined for.
But don’t hurry the journey at all.
Better if it lasts for years,
so you’re old by the time you reach the island,
wealthy with all you’ve gained on the way,
not expecting Ithaka to make you rich.
Ithaka gave you the marvelous journey.
Without her you wouldn't have set out.
She has nothing left to give you now.
And if you find her poor, Ithaka won’t have fooled you.
Wise as you will have become, so full of experience,
you’ll have understood by then what these Ithakas mean.
(By C. P. Cavafy, translated by Edmund Keeley)
The way it is told, though, activates the reader’s feelings about having taken a voyage like this and how they felt about it. And we suddenly understand what this universal truth means because it becomes imbedded in our own experience. This is something that poetry does like nothing else: to suddenly turn GENERAL KNOWLEDGE in which we believe into TRUTH because we understand what it has to do with us.
The last example was a poem by Georg Trakl – which made me instantly remember how I had felt when I read those. How much I had liked them not because of any personal involvement but just because of the unique sensual texture they have. You kind of recognize what he describes – otherwise it wouldn’t work on us – but it adds so much of an unfelt sensual quality. New sensations. Poetry can make us aware of how much we need – and are able to! – FEEL the world that is around us.
Landschaft
Septemberabend; traurig tönen die dunklen Rufe der Hirten
Durch das dämmernde Dorf; Feuer sprüht in der Schmiede.
Gewaltig bäumt sich ein schwarzes Pferd; die hyazinthenen
Locken der Magd
Haschen nach der Inbrunst seiner purpurnen Nüstern.
Leise erstarrt am Saum des Waldes der Schrei der Hirschkuh
Und die gelben Blumen des Herbstes
Neigen sich sprachlos über das blaue Antlitz des Teichs.
In roter Flamme verbrannte ein Baum; aufflattern mit dunklen
Gesichtern die Fledermäuse.
This extraordinary crash course on poetry gave me the idea that this might be what I need, and I set myself a task: ONE POEM A WEEK. The first one will have to be a classic love poem because I will have to figure out first how to find poems I want to read. That’s already a big issue, and at the moment this appears rather like toil, or desperation, actually. But I have had this feeling for some time that I needed to do something different. While I am outwardly really busy on my countless “construction sites”, I must be dying inside, of boredom. I am just always doing the same thing, and even though there is some kind of evolution, and I find new things there all the time, there is nothing genuinely constructive. Something that makes me move FORWARD and might get me to a different place. Poetry will not automatically achieve this – no more than any other reading could. What gave me the idea was the realization that I would have to deal more – and maybe more seriously – with my OWN stuff. And we cannot circumvent our own life when we are dealing with poetry.
I was really happy and thrilled when I discovered my own “mind palace” technique. How I can access my own inner space when I really need to. The most important thing about imagining it as different rooms are probably the doors – because I can walk out and CLOSE them behind me. It was very encouraging, but the only thing I have done so far – apart from completely “updating” one room, throwing things out, dusting, moving the furniture about – is to make inventories of what is there. Now I might have discovered why the technique is so useful in THIS context = for READING. I have a general idea how text works, simplified as “the vortex”. But the simplification works because, if I REALLY read, the vortex automatically reveals itself. It is different for every text and can be described. Therefore the text never remains this BLACK BOX, it becomes the playing field. And what I DON’T find when I am there doesn’t matter. At least for my part I am usually doing very well without any theories about a fictional world cooked up by other people. But the other part of my text production process is more doubtful. The black box that is called MYSELF. I actually feel much more uncertain and “inferior” about myself than I feel about what is “in” the text. Visiting my “mind palace” – even though it has already been this incredible improvement as to the possible content of the black box – has made me more aware of the uncertainty. I have a feeling that it is very difficult to deal entirely HONESTLY with what I find, and I am interested if poetry might help me with that.
Oh, and I found the room with "Myself" on the door! Accidentally, rummaging through the old stuff. (And this time I won't tell how I found it, and who helped me find it! 😁)
It had to be there, of course, and it was not, as I had expected, something scary. Though I interact with Loki, and concede that he is a part of me, it is not who I am. MYSELF is where I go to feel SAFE. It is an almost empty room, maybe rather boring, but I like to go in there. I think now that I must be going in there all the time because it felt so familiar when I discovered it, though not “resolutely” enough. There are no decorations, cushions and stuff, or DVDs, or music that make me feel good about myself. MYSELF is where I keep my greatest treasure – I think the greatest treasure anybody can have. I once discovered it in “Hamlet” without quite realizing that I did. It is how Hamlet feels – and how I feel, obviously: “If I achieve to be a good person, whatever happens, I am in the clear.” (That’s why “Hamlet” is a tragedy!) - And I believe that “everybody” has this room. (Even Henry VIII had it, I think I agree about this with Hilary Mantel – but not Donald Trump!) We just need to be in this room MORE OFTEN.
What I find in there is this belief that I am what I want to be more than anything: a DECENT HUMAN BEING.