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On Kenneth Rexroth

’s Poetry Essay, Research Paper


Donald K. Gutierrez


Kenneth


Rexroth, who was born in l905 and died in l982, was a major American poet. He wrote poetry


for over sixty years, and though he had some recognition during his lifetime, it was far


less than his work (prose as well as poetry) deserved. A bohemian, an astute literary and


social critic and radical, an autodidact and polymath, a transvaluational thinker and wit,


confabulator," a translator of poetry from half a dozen languages,


Rexroth failed to gain the recognition during his lifetime that h deserved as a poet


in part because American literary politics and literary critical orientations didn’t


not work in his favor during a sizable part of his career, Ironically, much of his best


verse was written from the l930s to the mid-l950s, a period when academic, literary


and political tastes prevailed that were alien to many of the social, philosophical and


artistic values for which Rexroth’s art and life stood.


Rexroth’s view of poetry as communication,


as heightened speech between persons, was violently at odds with the New Criticism and its


idea of a poem as a self-referential text to be de-mystified by exhaustive analysis and


interpretation. His attachment to a world-wide avant-garde and to the political left wing


alienated him from such influential, political and aesthetically conservative critic-poets


as John Crowe Ransome and Allen Tate and their journal, Kenyon Review, not to


mention the politically radical, but anti-West-Coast New York intelligentsia


represented especially in the l940s and l950s by Partisan Review. Rexroth had


been a prime force in a vigorous artistic vanguard centered in San Francisco since the


l930s which had intercultural relations with the political left wing (mainly Anarchist) as


well as with the Beat Renaissance of the mid-l950s which he publicized and


championed.


It was only in the last fifteen years or so of


his life that Rexroth’s translations of Asian verse gained him some recognition. This


is a shame, because Rexroth was an important poet. He wrote a large number of first rate


poems, both long and short. The Phoenix and the Tortoise, a mid-period book of


verse (l940), was once described by Thomas Parkinson as commensurate in worth to


Eliot’s The Four Quartets. Rexroth wrote a number of significant long poems,


such as Part I of The Phoenix and the Tortoise, The Dragon and the


Unicorn, and the two relatively long works written in Japan in the l960s and l970s,


respectively, entitled The Heart’s Garden, the Garden’s Heart and The


Love Poems of Marichiko.


Two primary subject categories in Rexroth’s


verse of love and nature include many of Rexroth’s best poems such as "When We


With Sappho," "Lyell’s Hypothesis Again," "The Signature of All


Things," "Time Is the Mercy of Eternity," "Yugao," "Towards


An Organic Philosophy," "Another Spring," the broadly political poem August


22, l939," and the seven "Marthe" poems. A key passage in one of


Rexroth’s best poems, "Time Is the Mercy of Eternity," runs as follows:


The holiness of the real


Is always there, accessible


In total immanence. The nodes


Of transcendence coagulate


In you, the experiencer,


And in the other, the lover. [? 1956]


The first three lines especially provide a golden


thread through significant, representative Rexroth poems. It suggests a spiritual


dimension present in much of Rexroth’s better work, but, importantly, projected in


terms of the everyday and the "everywhere." One facet of this holy reality


resides in Rexroth’s poetry of reminiscence and reverie. Rexroth is a remarkable poet


of reminiscence (let alone reverie), recalling his mother Delia (in "Delia


Rexroth"), his first wife Andree Dutcher ("You ashes/Were scattered in


this place. Here/I wrote you a farewell poem"), his entranced childhood in "Un


Bel di Vedremo" ("…that other /World before the War," a world of Debs and


Huneker, of lace evening gowns and Japanese prints), the grisly scene of the Chicago


stockyards in l9l7 on his first visit to Chicago (narrated in the l950s poem "The Bad


Old Days"). He reminisces because he feels, usually convincingly, that he is


recalling objects, people, values, events worth re-evoking for themselves and for


what they symbolize, but he also draws attention through reminiscence to the transience of


life and thus to the need to crystallize value amidst the flux of existence. Also


memorable is Rexroth’s capacity to project in his poetry a passion so consuming even


in reminiscence that it obliterates past and present.


The Phoenix and the Tortoise, which


contains some of Rexroth’s finest verse, also includes probably his greatest love


poem of reverie and reminiscence, "When We With Sappho."


"Sappho" is too long a poem to analyze at length here, but I shall quote the


first stanza in order to exhibit the poem’s felicitous natural expression and


lyricism which result in part from Rexroth’s deft 7-9 syllabic meter (which he


frequently used) and his deceptively simple diction:


We lie here in the bee filled, ruinous


Orchard of a decayed


New England farm,


Summer in our hair, and the smell


Of summer in our twined


bodies,


Summer in our mouths, and


summer


In the luminous, fragmentary words


Of this dead Greek woman.


Stop reading. Lean back. Give me your mouth.


Your grace is as beautiful as sleep.


You move against me like a wave


That moves in sleep.


Your body spreads across my brain


Like a bird-filled summer. . . [? 1944]


Here, sexual love and intercourse are compared to


organic human occurrences like sleep. But the comparison moves towards metaphor, for sex,


sleep and nature ("bird filled summer" and ocean wave) are so blended as almost


to render nature and human nature as one. Sexual love is presented as an activity


and action as natural as the elements, but then a commanding perspective in Rexroth’s


verse is the congruence of human existence with the phenomena of nature. His love and


nature verse is full of this concentricity and even of blended identification, whether in


the stunning "Lyell’s Hypothesis Again," climaxing (again, in a love


setting) in its "immortal/Hydrocarbons of flesh and stone" or in the


post-orgasmic quietude of the poem "Still on Water," in which "Solitude


closes down around us/As we lie passive and exhausted/Solitude clamps us softly in its


warm hand."


The accomplishment of "Sappho" is in


part its recording and mediating experiences of love, time and process through reverie as


poetic art. The poem doesn’t depend on the facile appeal of vivid eroticism or


voyeurism, or of dissatisfaction as sensationalized longing. If there is a consciousness


in the poem, it is one so arching through time and transience as to resemble Nicolas


Berdyaev’s beautiful term the superconscious. The lovers try to sustain the


almost supernatural vividness and clarity of Sappho’s sensibility, under "Gold


colossal domes of cumulus clouds//which/ Lift over the undulant, sibilant forest."


The natural in "Sappho" is almost supernatural in the sheer accessibility of its


"total immanence." As love, it becomes "the nodes of transcendence,"


and, conveyed in a poem, becomes, to Rexroth, a sacramentalizing of experience. Or as he


puts it at the end of "A Letter to William Carlos Williams,"a poet


"creates/Sacramental relationships/That last always."


Rexroth wrote poems about love in more than a few


of its myriad permutations. If, accordingly, he could write memorably of love as


realization of self and other, of each through each other (as in the "Marthe"


poem "Growing"), he could also speak of the ineffable poignancy of love’s,


like nature’s, transience, as he does in the l940s poem "Another spring":


The


Seasons revolve and the years change


With no assistance or supervision.


Thee moon, without taking thought,


Moves in its cycle, full, crescent, and full.


The


white moon enters the heart of the river;


The air is drugged with azalea blossoms;


Deep in the night a pine cone falls;


Our campfire dies out I the empty mountains.


. . . .


. . . .


Here we lie entranced by the starlit water,


And moments that should each last forever


Slide unconsciously by us like


water. [? 1944]


If stanza one implies a meaning to or behind the


nature description, stanza two submerges us in nature through an ostensible


presentativeness that is one of Rexroth’s subtlest representational achievements as a


poet. The lines, here and in other poems, effect a preternatural directness and


authenticity.


A sharper grief than that in "Another


Spring" resides in all three of the Andree-Rexroth elegies, Rexroth’s tribute to


his first wife Andree Dutcher who died in l940 and who, like Rexroth, was a vanguard


artist. Here is the first two-thirds and more "objective" part of the second


elegy":


Purple and green, blue and white,


The Oregon river mouths


Slide into thick smoky


darkness


As the turning cup of the day


Slips from the whirling


hemisphere


And all that white long beach gleams


In white twilight as the lights


Come on in the lonely


hamlets;


And voices of men emerge;


And dogs, barking, as the wind stills.


Those August evenings are


Sixteen years old tonight and I


Am sixteen years older too- [? 1944]


The simplest of the three elegies, this one is


moving in its progression from these sensitively recorded details of place sixteen years


earlier when Andree was last seen alive to a present without Andree, in which Rexroth


remains


Lonely, caught in the midst of life,


In the chaos of the world;


And all the years that we were young


Are gone, and every atom


Of your learned and disordered


Flesh is utterly consumed.


This elegy does not exhibit self-pity, despite


the "lonely"; generally, the feelings in the poem are banked low by only being


implied. This elegy to Andree acquires a certain impersonality by in the main relying on


direct objective statement by which to register its pathos, not only in the irremediable


passage of time when they were together, but in the final immutability of the loss of


Andree, herself inexorably gone. The very personalness of the poem, the intensity of


relationship, serves to keep the reader removed, not emotionally, but in terms of ready


identification. Despite the deeply anguished awareness of the utter finality of the loss,


no consolation is offered.


The Love Poems of Marichiko (l978)


represents an order of love verse strikingly different in some ways from all


Rexroth’s other love verse and remarkable for a man in his late sixties. Marichiko


is a sequential verse narrative of sixty short verses supposedly written by a Japanese


"poetess" named Marichiko that Rexroth claims to have translated. Actually,


Rexroth wrote the Marichiko poems. This work constitutes an unforgettable union


of passion and poignancy, crystallized by a context of love bliss and almost unbearable


forlornness. In short, the series comprises a mini-tragedy of being loved and left. Thus


the deeper thematic elements in the poem provide its searing eroticism with a process of


tragic realism that is a high achievement in American love verse.


The set of poems is too long to scrutinize in its


entirety here, but a quotation sketch of the work will convey its flavor and some of its


force:


I sit at my desk.


What can I write to you?


Sick with love,


I long to see you in the flesh.


I can write only,


‘I love you. I love you. I love you.’


Love cuts through my heart


And scars my vitals.


Spasms of longing suffocate me


And will not stop.


This intensity is typical of the entire sequence


and of its dramatic desperation and anguish. Apt metaphors communicate the power of the


passions permeating this love. Says "Marichiko,"


Making love with you


Is like drinking sea water.


The more I drink


The thirstier I become,


Until nothing can slake my thirst


But to drink the entire sea.


With such an unquenchable appetite for love ,

we


are subtly prepared for some strong erotic episodes, and soon get one:


You wake me,


Part my thighs, and kiss me.


I give you the dew


Of the first morning of the world,


in which the cunnilingual sex is partly


sublimated by an apocalyptic context suggesting through poetic license the extremity of


passion of this love experience.


This love is so obsessive and overwhelming to


"Marichiko" that even daytime, the major phase of our conscious lives and


strivings, is subordinated to night and dreams of love and lover:


Because I dream


Of you every night,


My lonely days


Are only dreams.


Relations subtly, mysteriously change, and by


poem # 38, after a few quiet hints in two or three preceding poems, we get this:


I waited all night.


By midnight I was on fire.


In the dawn, hoping


To find a dream of you,


I laid my weary head


On my folded arms,


But the songs of the waking


Birds tormented me


which is followed six poems later by


. . .


My hollow eyes and gaunt cheeks


Are your fault.


Clearly, another, sinister phase of the


relationship has evolved. Little reason is given for its occurrence ("Our love was


dimmed by/Forces which came from without," we are told (#46)), but that explanation


is vague at best, and leads us to think that the cause of the end of love is less


important than its occurrence, which (for some people) is inevitable, like the succession


of the seasons, or death. The final poems in the sequence are as fraught with grief,


misery and bitterness as the earlier ones were radiant with joy and ecstasy:


My heart flares with this agony.


Do you understand?


My life is going out.


Do you understand?


My life.


The final poem in the sequence implies death in


life for the woman, in these concluding lines:


I hate the sight of coming day


Since that morning when


Your insensitive gaze turned me to ice


Like the pale moon in the dawn.


Thus the series does not end sensationally, in


melodrama or violence. Rather, it ends the way such matters often enough end in life, in


rejection, estrangement, bitterness, one’s desire to live ebbing into a darkening


grayness. "Chilled through, I wake up with the first light," she says in the


same poem. The real integrity of the "Marichiko"sequence does not arise from


some facile causal explanation or moral judgment. The poems suggest that love begins,


grows, wanes and sometimes ends. One can’t always explain it, love can be like that.


It does end, and that is as much a part of the actual trajectory of life (if less


palatable to our basic ideals or fantasies) as unending love or marital fidelity. Aside


from such bony realism, the "Marichiko" poems are remarkable for so


utterly blending romance and realism that the extremities of ecstatic love become


inextricably part of the same world of experience as the acrid horror of abandonment. They


are especially remarkable, though, for being so free of moral pronouncement and for


the narrative they frame, which allows Rexroth’s capacity for an impersonal poetics


even more scope than do most of his love lyrics.


The Dragon and the Unicorn is a


book-length poem written in the late l940s describing Rexroth’s travels in mainly


post-World-War-II Europe. The book is a rich brew of travel material: sharp, memorable


responses to cities and towns, museums and galleries, restaurants, cuisines and inns,


persons famous, infamous or little-known but fascinatingly presented. Dragon is


further enriched by polemic and ideology, exquisite lyric set-pieces, philosophic


meditations on love, the compacted evil of the modern era, past political lost causes, and


many opinions, some engaging, some challenging or startling.


Typical of the philosophic-ideological passages


in Dragon is the following part of one:


Every collectivity


Is opposed to community.


As Capitalism and the


State become identical,


All existence assumes the


Character of a vast


Conspiracy to quantify


The Individual. . .[? 1950]


Some might weary of the sweeping, ex cathedra


character of passages like this, or feel that it comes close to being prose. However, it


is definitely verse in its subtly crafted syllabic meter. What, moreover, might have


seemed outlandishly left-wing or hysterical as a critique of American society in the late


l940s seems today like powerfully relevant, sanely Anarchist jeremiads against the


concentrated American power structures emerging out of the war. Further, Rexroth


alternates such passages with nature and love lyrics as sensuously compelling and forceful


as his best lyrics elsewhere in his work:


Bright petals of evening


Shatter, fall, drift over Florence,


And flush your cheeks a redder


Rose and gleam like fiery flakes


In your eyes. . .


. . .Your moist, quivering


Lips are like the wet scarlet wings


Of a reborn butterfly who


Trembles on the rose petal as


Life floods his strange body.


Turn to me. Part your


lips. My dear,


Some day we will be


dead.


This counterpointing of abstract, ideological


passages and sensuous lyrics lends Dragon form, as does its travel itinerary and


its consistent tone of worldliness, erudition and heterodoxical authority. Though a few


passages of misogyny and homophobia mar the book, they are more than compensated for by


Rexroth’s intellectual audacity, bright responsiveness to what he sees, and his


ideological anger and compassion. This compassion is exemplified by one of the highlights


of Dragon which Rexroth movingly contrasts an Age of Gold in the medieval culture


of Southern France with one of Iron. The latter was comprised of the Papacy and


imperialist England and Northern France which annihilated the Provence of the olive and


the vine, with its flourishing culture of love and literature, a booming economy and


heretical Catharism.


Opinionated, occasionally arrogant and savage, Dragon


is nevertheless an extraordinary work not only as poetry, wisdom, left-wing jeremiad,


historical reminiscence, ideological inspiration and travel experience, but as a prescient


revelation of the massive nihilism and corruption released in societies by World War II,


the Atom Bomb and the genocidal bent of sheer profit-oriented, large-corporation-driven


economies. Dragon is unquestionably one of Rexroth’s major works, and a


major American poem in its own right.


In poems like "The Signature of All


Things" or "Yugao" or "Lyell’s Hypothesis Again" or the


"Andree-Rexroth" elegies, Rexroth’s work does not even seem like poetry in


the sense of being a "verbal construct" or a convention of artful words and


syntactic and rhythmic strategies–rather, his poems seem like an exalted experience


undergone through words which have been rendered so clear, so "artless" and


"right" as to take on a kind of numinous transparency revealing the heart of the


poem’s essential life itself. This intense limpidity, when it occurs in Rexoth’s


verse, can make his poems distinctly crystalline, a mystical image and quality he himself


frequently invoked.


The words "crystal" and


"crystalline" provide a link to the last aspect of Rexroth’s verse there is


space to discuss: contemplation. Rexroth ends one of his finest poems, "Time Is the


Mercy of Eternity," with these words:


Suspended


In absolutely transparent time, I


Take on a kind of crystalline


Being. In this translucent


Immense here and now, if ever,


The form of the person should be


Visible, its geometry,


Its crystallography, and


Its astronomy. The good


And evil of my history


Go by. I can see them and


Weigh them. They go first, with all


The other personal facts,


And sensations, and desires.


At last there is nothing left


But knowledge, itself a vast


Crystal encompassing the


Limitless crystal of air


And rock and water. And the


Two crystals are perfectly


Silent. There is nothing to


Say about them. Nothing at all. [? 1956]


The word "crystal" is mentioned in one


form or another five times in these last 23 lines. This pivotal word and image relate to a


few of Rexroth’s ideas about contemplation, and inform us too about the purpose of


contemplation in Rexroth’s verse generally. For a poet to urge, as Rexroth does, that


poetry (and thus art) as contemplation constitutes the webbing that keeps society from


disintegrating or from destroying itself is a forceful claim. By dramatizing in "Time


Is the Mercy of Eternity" the contemplative, mystical process through imagery of the


crystal which by its very nature reduces physical reality to its basic structure (thus


accentuating the "mystical" qualities of transparency, clarity, heightened


visibility), one provides a kind of direct, phenomenal authority for words asserting the


primacy of contemplation as vision. Vision is intensified, even exalted, seeing. But


contemplation and vision go beyond that, for, as in "Time" or in a slighter,


monistic poem by Rexroth called "The Heart of Herakles" (from


"The-Lights-in-the-Sky-Are-Stars" series (1956)), one crosses the traditional


and arbitrary line between subject (the "I") and object (the "it,"


Other, World) and, becoming part of one’s surroundings, transcends their and


one’s own partialness towards an exalted clarity ("I take on a kind of


crystalline being"). What follows resembles the Buddhist transcendence of all worldly


ties and associations represented as Nirvana (the good and evil of one’s history


going by, as well as "personal facts, sensations, desires"). One is left in this


mystical denudation in a state of mind–again, crystalline–that Rexroth mentions


frequently and which can be summed up in lines from his long l967 poem The


Heart’s Garden, the Garden’s Heart: "He who lives without


grasping/Lives always in the experience/Of the immediate as the Ultimate."


What Rexroth is doing with his crystal figure, so


symbolically climactic to his entire poem and, considering the definition from Heart’s


Garden, to his work itself, is imagizing or symbolizing the contemplative state.


There is no absolute in the traditional religious sense even in "Time"’s


two crystals of self and world, unless one wishes to say that they are


"absolutely" real or reside at the center of reality. But one need not decide on


this absoluteness, need not even say and thus think anything about them. Perhaps that


constitutes some of the meaning of the last three-and-a-half lines of the poem: "And


the/Two crystals are perfectly/Silent. There is nothing to/Say about them. Nothing at


all." The silence beyond words and thoughts (let alone "facts, sensations, and


desires") is conceivably a mystical aural facet of the crystalline vision climaxing


"Time," and as such offers a summit of tranquillity from which to contemplate


newly how time is the mercy of eternity.


When James Wright wrote in l980 that "Over


the years I have learned that I am far from being alone in being so grateful to Rexroth,


and I believe he has saved many poets from imaginative death," he was in part


alluding to Rexroth’s essays and translations, but even more to Rexroth’s love


verse. But I would guess that what poets like Wright and many others–poets and


non-poets–essentially prized about Rexroth’s work was that he seemed to have a great


knack for clearing away the rant, pretensions and chicanery in society concealing reality.


When he turned his keen sense of the real away from organized society, which he described


as held together by the Social Lie, and focused on love, political/philosophical and


nature subjects, a particular lucidity, vividness and intensity emerged in his verse that


one could call the natural supernatural. Speaking of D. H. Lawrence’s Look! We


Have Come Through!, Rexroth says "Reality is totally valued. . . ..The clarity


of purposively realize objectivity is the most supernatural of all visions."


This applies perfectly to Rexroth’s own poetry as well, and is another way of


indicating that numinous glow on and within the natural and the ordinary that his best


work gives off-the holiness of the real.


Donald K. Gutierrez


Copyright ? 1999

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