|
Reflections
on Thomas McGrath's Letter to an Imaginary Friend, Part
One
My
maternal grandfather's brother Benjamin and his wife Yetta,
both of them life-long communists, had a radical affect on
me as a young poet developing an understanding of class consciousness
and justice as it relates to labor. Although they could be
slightly blind in the either-or conflict of Stalinist Communism
versus Capitalist Democracy, they engendered a solid distrust
of the capitalist system of labor, which they could document
by their own human struggles as a presser and a seamstress.
To make it as far outside of the system as they could, they
ended up as small chicken ranchers in Petaluma, California
where they eked out a way to live on their own for over thirty
years. I had been reading Dylan Thomas, Kenneth Patchen, and
Federico Garcia Lorca, but I feel that I first came into contact
with political poetry in the basement of the small house where
they retired to in Petaluma. I had been staying with my great
aunt and uncle while attending classes at College of Marin
when-in the middle of a series of questions about what I was
going to with my life-I declared awkwardly but emphatically
that I had been writing poetry for three years and I intended
on becoming a poet. I don't think they cared what I turned
out to be as long as I had class consciousness, which I sensed
for the two of them was primary to any notion of being mentally
sound, that is, if ethics was a component. "Oh-h-h, so,
you want to be a poet? So, come, come," she said, and
my uncle and I followed her down the back porch to the daylight
basement room where they kept the overflow from their library.
She picked through Mike Gold and some Howard Fast, and shuffled
around a few selected Daily Worker folders then came
out with two worn paperbacks: a chapbook of poems by Langston
Hughes and a translation of Pablo Neruda's Let the Railsplitter
Awake. "Old lady from a village outside of Kiev I
don't even remember the name of, you forgot one." I turned
to face my uncle who was holding up a copy of New and Selected
Poems by Thomas McGrath. When we were back upstairs Yetta
said, "Go ahead, read, read, and if you smoke don't open
the window, go outside, it stinks, it stinks, your smoking."
And I went off into the room I stayed in for several weeks
before I found a rundown cottage to rent near the college.
Because of the historical and emotional immediacy, out of
those three volumes McGrath's had the strongest effect on
me. Poems like "Nightmare," "Many in the Darkness,"
"The Dialectics of Love," "A Warrant for Pablo
Neruda," "The Trouble with the Times," "Return
to Marsh Street," "A Coal Fire in Winter,"
and others combined a metaphorical Wallace Stevens and Dylan
Thomas-like elaboration of language with a narrative flow
that contained the material of insight usual lyric poetry
suppressed.
A few years later I read Thomas McGrath's Letter to an
Imaginary Friend Part I. My focus here on the first of
the four books is neither a negative criticism of the following
three parts nor of his shorter lyric poems. There are books
that come to you during excruciating and memorable periods
of self-discovery. For me, several of those experiences included
Whitman's poetry and prose, Dickinson's poetry and letters,
Sesuki's Introduction to Zen Buddhism, Freud's The
Pleasure Principle, Rexroth's poetry and essays, Dostoyevsky's
The Idiot, The Double, and Notes from the
Underground, Gogol's Dead Souls, Twain's Huckleberry
Finn, Traven's The Death Ship, Lawrence's Women
in Love and Sons and Lovers, Cendrars' Prose
of the Tran Siberian, Camus' Myth of Sisyphus,
Buber's translations of The Tales of the Hasidim, Hemingway's
A Farewell to Arms, Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching
God, Celine's Journey to the End of the Night,
Miller's two Tropic books, John Lame Deer's Seeker
of Visions, Black Elk's autobiography, and Marquez's One
Hundred Years of Solitude. McGrath's Letter to an Imaginary
Friend, Part One was such a book for me. It had a liberating
effect on my writing and my understanding of ways to write
poetry, and it helped me toward a deeper understanding of
experience.
Deriving in part from Whitman's collage technique in his long
poem Song of Myself, McGrath's narrative sense of immediacy
with historic events coupled with the struggle for self-knowledge
diverges from Whitman's mystically Democratic personal and
collective representation. No comparison of the two poets
is intended. Song of Myself is a lasting work of American
and world literature, and so is Letter to an Imaginary
Friend. Generally speaking, neither are Whitman and McGrath
politically or philosophically opposed to each other, but
the problems of working-class exploitation and alienation
not to mention the problems of imperialism and empire were
not solved by the system Whitman partially placed his hopes
in. Living in a time when the Democratically-utopian ideas
of Jefferson, Owen, Kropotkin, and Marx were fresh and prevalent
among the working people exposed to them, there is reason
to accept Whitman's hope-though the decimation of the native
American tribes, the entrenched anti-abolitionist mentality,
and Western expansion threw into question any notion of a
progressive sense of hope. McGrath's sensibility is a political
as well as a cultural expansion distinct in style and temperament
from Whitman's sensibility. Concurrent with the revolution
of Modernism, Cubism, and Simultanism that took place in the
arts during the early part of the twentieth century was the
organization of the Industrial Workers of the World (the Wobblies,
IWW, or Wobs), the most radical working-class organization
to emerge in the U.S. The IWW believed in a union of all the
workers of the world within a system that erased exploitation,
which they attempted to achieve-militantly when necessary.
William D. Haywood, America's legendary revolutionist, was
the chairman of the first conference of the IWW. "Fellow
workers," he said, "the aims and objects of this
organization shall be to put the working class in possession
of the economic power, the means of life, in control of the
machinery of production and distribution without regard to
capitalist masters" (Adamic p.157).
When McGrath was a boy working on his father's farm he met
Cal who, judging by the decency of his character as portrayed
in part one of Letter-it was crucial though incidental
that he was a member of the IWW. McGrath was watched-over
by Cal as older men or other pre-adult males will recognize
a boy with care as though by a rare, but customary, masculine
code. It is a code of personality-emulation stressing ethical
views. In the world of working-class Humanist consciousness
these views, guided by an extreme emphasis on egalitarianism,
involve everything from treatment of family members to an
understanding of labor, consideration toward women, tolerance
to children and elders; cautious goodwill to strangers; what
is serious and what is comic, and why. These down-to-earth
and robust men-any child is lucky to encounter their teaching.
Inherent in such an encounter is a strong component for the
origins of the confidence to create personal skill, as well
as to individually integrate and continue the same custom
of an initiatory practice to serve others. What is learned
goes beyond immediate knowledge, extending communal intimacy
through the course of time. Also, within the context of knowledge
it defines itself through the act of transmission as a possession
that is inherently a gift:
My
father took me as far as he could go that summer,
Those midnights, mostly, back from his long haul.
But mostly Cal, one of the bundle teamsters,
My sun-blackened Virgil of the spitting circle,
Led me from depth to depth.
Toward
the light
I was too young to enter.
He must have been thirty. As thin as a post,
As tough as Whang-leather, with a brick-topped mulish face,
A quiet talker. He read The Industrial Worker,
Though I didn't know what the paper was at the time.
The last of the real Wobs--that, too, I didn't know,
Couldn't.
Played
harmonica; sat after supper
In the lantern smell and late bat-whickering dusk,
Playing mumbly-peg and talked of wages and hours
At the bunkhouse door. On Sunday cleaned his gun,
A Colt .38 he let me shoot at a hawk-
It jumped in my arm and my whole arm tingled with shock.
A quiet man with the smell of the road on him,
The smell of far places...
What
he tried to teach me was how to take my time,
Not to be impatient, not to shy at the fence,
Not to push on the reins, not to baulk nor pull the leather,
Tried to teach me when to laugh and when to be serious,
When to laugh at the serious, be serious in my laughter,
To laugh at myself and be serious with my self.
He wanted me to grow without growing too fast for myself.
A good teacher, a brother. (p. 17-18).
Cal,
the organizer of men in need, the warm teacher, signals and
becomes symbolic of the I-Thou brotherly relationship, which
is understood as a transmitted value of individuals and brothers
extended within a Democratic collective. McGrath's view to
his interior life and its relation to the collective life
is not a fantasy of idealism or revolution or what E.P. Thompson
in his perceptive "Homage to Thomas McGrath" refers
to as a "reputable nostalgia" (Thompson p. 110).
As a young man in a brutal winter of the Depression, without
any chance at other work, he hitches up with a crew of loggers,
actually woodchoppers cutting lumber into "stove length
rounds/ chunks of pure sunlight made warmer by our work"
(46). Hard work, long hours in the subzero woods, but the
men have an allegiance, a sense of necessity within the small
workers' community of desperate need. McGrath speaks of the
tranquility
of the solidarity in the woods:
Sometimes at evening with the
dusk sifting down through the trees
And the trees like a smudge
on the white hills and the hills drifting
Into the hushed light, into
the huge, the looming, holy
Night;--sometimes, then, in
the pause and balance
Between dark and day, with the
noise of our labor stilled,
And still in ourselves we felt
our kinship, our commune
Against the cold. (p. 46)
Earlier in Section V. McGrath refers to a "night journey,"
by way of a lift he's taking to Buffalo from where he will
set out for school. And it is the beginning of the journey
of a young man into "the night," leaving home, the
fecundity and virulence, the unpredictability that awaits
him on that journey, ominous and flagrant with the troubles
that come to a poet approaching the "mine" and "the
underground streams" of the imagination and buried emotion.
It is also the beginning of the anxiety of departure from
earlier rituals that can not-without psychological stagnation-outlast
the time of their occasion. Moreover, the rituals of sexuality
to which the teenage man is "plenipotentiary...clamped
to the sweating pelt," will pass through other affairs
and departures, and night journeys between them and no sentimentality
over these affairs either, but another kind of night related
to the original, which is part of the poet's
"Nightmare, struggle, despair,
and dream."
Love and Hunger!-that is my
whole story.
An education in the form of
a night journey.
Congo of the heart...
Dream
voyage...
Safari
To the dark interior.
Chaffinch, miner's canary, O
white mice
Of Sir Humphrey Davy be with
me now!
Borne
on the underground stream,
I entered the hornacle mine--trivium--quadrivium-
In the rattling Ford, through
the black stopes of a dust storm
From Sheldon to Buffalo.
Stopped
in that dead of night,
The midnight noon of nineteen-thirty-five,
Becalmed in a dark our headlights
could not pierce
And my father gave me advice.
Advice and ten dollars
The money to last for a year,
the advice for a lifetime.
I heard the wind howl in the
night of the dust... (p. 31)
Writing
from the Greek Island of Skyros, having traveled through Spain,
Mexico, across the United States and world war; seeing the
situation of the poor, the miserable cities with interchangeable
governments, McGrath writes: "Dakota is everywhere./
A condition." One might say it is a condition from Watts
to Afghanistan, from the "planting" of dynamite
by agents of the Mill owners during the Lawrence strike in
1912 to the planting of weapons in the yard of a church worker
in San Salvador during a popular uprising, from the anti-humane
police state expansion of the Israeli settlements to the corporate-imperialist
war waged over the non-existence of weapons of mass destruction
in Iraq. "The condition" beckons for a sensibility
that is outraged, compassionate, and morally practical. Part
of the tragedy of our time is that an obligation to such a
sensibility has become unaccountable or indeterminate in the
make up of human consciousness. Mark Twain, responding to
the Imperialist foreign policy-makers re-sharpening their
knives in the United States, France, Germany, Russia, Belgium,
and England, wrote:
I bring you the stately matron
named Christendom, returning bedraggled,
besmirched and dishonored from pirate-raids
in Kiao-Chow, Manchuria,
South Africa and the Philippines,
with her soul full of meanness, her
pocket full of boodle and her mouth
full of pious hypocrisies. Give her
soap and a towel, but hide the looking-glass.
(Twain p. 13)
"Dakota
is everywhere./ A condition."
At the core of McGrath's narrative are the self-revelations
of a man struggling to develop a personal system of humane
and erotic values:" Love and hunger!-that is my whole
story/ An education in the form of a night journey" (p.
31). Though the presence of Cal has passed out of his life,
the reality of his activism informs McGrath's anger over the
crushing, co-opting, and marginalizing of the working-class.
Still, the life of the individual man goes on however stilted,
hung-up, or oppressed. "Now what is harder to know than
the simplest joy?" (McGrath p. 55) the poet asks.
Early scenes of Letter catalogue and recollect love
affairs in Dakota, and the lusty now slightly older man refers
with direct jargon and humor to a harsh winter,
"whose cold could make your balls ache when there was
nothing to warm them/ But my burning and stallion need-that
grand old religion/ of which I am the Pope" (p. 44).
But now as though instinctually: an end to journeying: an
unfolding into settling down occurs in the poem. The sexual
recognition, arriving as it often does in advance of erotic
commitment, seems to have stunned McGrath as much as it inspired
him. It shook him up. There appears to be a side within him
that wasn't ready, that needed to wander longer and more thoroughly
in that "Safari/ to [his own] dark interior." Exquisitely
expressed, he anticipates the loss that will come: "A
rose, a flower of warmth in the heart of the abstract cold./I
was bound to lose it" (p.56). But it is not clearly explained
how the loss finally occurs. Only that even this early vital
love is somehow victimized by the poet's interior chaos and
the "nightmare" and "struggle" of his
journey through the world. It can only be assumed that there
is a kind of wearing-out through the blending and conflicting
erosions that happen within the complexity of an unworkable
or premature marriage. But the relationship to Marian has
an initial force and up surging in the way it affects McGrath
as a catalyst, a primary actualization of the pair, the couple
united, the manifestation in the world of the poet's interior
marriage:
A warmth, a sunlight, and an
end to journeys-
That's what it seemed like,
was;
Or the permanent sky, maybe,
myself
drifting,
or
flame
Would light me north in the
long collapse of Time
When Vega is pole star.
So the journey ended, or seemed
to, in the sweet strength of
her flesh.
That brightness...softness
in
the fire-flame, in the fixed cone
Of light, I broke my fast, I
woke my want. (p. 56)
But
McGrath, whose journey "seemed to" end, foretells
of himself heading south "Toward music, toward speech,"
his beginnings as a poet (p. 61) and "all to the wars
and the whores and the wares and the ways of a rotten season"
(p. 59). The gap of details for the marital collapse that
is to come and which is reflected later in the poet's "dream
and despair; the journey around the wound..." (p.87)
is shifted to the exterior social nightmare and portents of
war oncoming. The terrors of the world the couple are surrounded
by are taken to its most basic even instinctual level in the
scene of the hunt as the night comes where they first lodged
"among madmen" and later by "the nameless river."
Then came the long night running
by the river shallows:
Pursuit
Workings of darkness
The endless hunting [...]
Rolling out of the dark-everything
running, running
The night running , the darkness
alive with
Running and the terror of the
long running.
The
brush cracked like a shot and the great shapes leaped,
Rode by like cloud, their eyes
slashed by long speed,
In the great frieze of terror.
The great and the noble deer
and the poor weak things of
the dark
Running, running, the hills
wild with their terror
The brush smashing and rustling
the shadows patterned with splashes-
Till the whole world seemed
running in that long hunt.
And the tame cattle joined the
running, came bellowing out of
the
brush
Their holy terror, their anguished
disbelief that they were hunted;
The horses crashed by, screaming
their hurt and hatred,
And the barnyard geese, and
the very birds of the place-
And at the last a man-was it
a man?
Came out of the willow brake,
running without a sound
While the peeling keen of the
hounds grew iron and round on the hills.
It passed us running, a thing
of the purest night,
Soundless.
The
terrible eyes begged no release (66-67).
The
irreality of the war arrives with shit-burning latrines and
sexlessness lousing the psyche. And here McGrath's surreal-blackened
satire and pathos concerning what it is to a be soldier at
war begins. The stop on board ship is to Anchorage "a
little nugget of dung..." in the passage over "the
freezing urine colored sea..." The alienated terrain
of war is:
Everything externalized; everything
on the outside;
Nowhere the loved thing, or
known thing.
In the night of the Army, the
true sleepwalker's country,
All are masked familiars at
the deaths of strangers-
It was the strangeness that
moved us. (p. 76)
Among
medics metamorphosed into junkies over madness of actual lacerated
bodies, scorched flesh, amputations; meat wagons carrying
off dead soldiers; suicide "swallowers of razor blades"
(p. 84), McGrath, driven to fight fascism for a government
that until the necessary and also convenient immersion in
the war was an oppressor and enemy of the very people who
were now the troops-satirizes the final cynicism of the whole
involvement and the cool savagery of military-industrial profiteers:
( They have heat-seeking missiles
for that kind of jazz,
Thermotropic anonymous letters
that explode at blood heat
And will blow you ass-ways just
because you are warm...)
Part of the Engineer's great
dream: a war without bandages. ( 85)
However,
a gripping content to the poet's psychic descent, which is
parallel to the intense worldly Inferno of the war, is unfortunately
skirted over. The lyrical narrative flow is consistent but
the passage leaves the reader with poetic generalities of
dark and light, life and death, laughter and grief. There
is a sense of fortuitous disposability to the difficulty or
unpleasantness of this content, and the poet travels past
"the bottom of the interior night and that antipodean
great/ beast/ (Whose charity is to devour)" (91 ). Nonetheless,
he goes down to the bottom, under the layers that drop from
the pit of that hole:
It was down there,
Past the milestones of my tombs
and the singing bones of my true loves
I come there:
Drifting:
In the high march and dead set
of the night, On the most direct road to my death
Most careless there?I come into
the Old Dominion, the true, breathing, holy, Dark.
There, old bird on the branch
of the lost midnight,
The Dark closed and clothed
me, and the pushed, furious beast
That burned and bit in my side
lay down to sleep.
Hushed
at last.
Then I saw the bones go singing-
Like stars or fireflies-
And came to the laughter:
The Holy Joke of myself in that
blizzard of dark and light:
To Laughter:
Laughter of light and dark and
the Holy Joke of that real world,
And the great open secret that
we all know and forget.
Samadhi. Satori.
Then
the night and its canting monsters turned holy around me.
Laughably holy.
And that lank gentleman, the
esthete snake, came by and bit me,
And the littlest sacred mad
dog of a crazy world,
And I gave him my heel to kiss
In my sudden pride:
In my quick ridiculous love:
In my wholeness and holiness:
In solidarity and indifference:
In the wild indifferent joy
which is man's true estate. (p. 92?93)
The
resurrection McGrath gains from his descent is as much a part
of his vision of a communal society as the creation of the
poem is the material testimony of his experience of "indifferent
wild joy."
The struggle of the working class to transform society in
to what Kropotkin referred to as "all for all" is
not simply an intellectual position taken up and upheld however
dignified by a poet remote from the struggle involved. McGrath
was there as a worker, an organizer, and a writer. And in
the late forties and early fifties he witnessed the struggle
first hand and was not taken in by the half hearted or phony
activists "Turning and turning/ fighting mainly each
other" (p. 88). There was a chaos overwhelming the working
class in the post-war grief and affluence fogging the high
profits of the military and manufacturing industries and the
further greed of multinational Imperialist adventure then
in Korea: "The last strikes sold out by the labor fakers
of business unionism Reuther Meany Social Plutocracy. (p.
118) That is, the "One Big Union" dream and struggle
of the IWW has turned into a grotesque union of labor, big-business
and government. The larger humane values integrated within
those of economic justice are now castrated and marginalized.
During the anti-constitutional purges of the late forties
and early fifties in the United States when members or one-time
members or associates of the communist party were hunted down
and jailed, or went into exile, all but the informers who
worked deals with the HUAC were blacklisted, and McGrath lost
his teaching job at L.A. State College, not to mention several
jobs thereafter wherever the blacklist was in effect. McGrath
bounced around and bounced back. Near the end of part one
of Letter he concludes:
Now, toward midnight, the rain
ends.
The flowers bow and whisper
and hush.
the
clouds break
And the great blazing constellations
rush up out of the dark
To
hang in the flaming North...
Arcturus, the Bear, the Hunter
Burning...
Now, the Furies come, my furious
Beast.
I have heard the laughter,
And I go forward from catastrophe
to disaster
Indifferent: singing... (p.99)
It
is remarkable and curious that McGrath waited until he turned
seventy for his work to receive the attention it deserved.
Although academic critics have been reluctant to celebrate
a long poem with a passionately expressed and unrestrained
sense for historical truth, McGrath has had a large following.
It is the same constituency that reads Pablo Neruda, Nazim
Hikmet, Kenneth Rexroth, Muriel Rhukyser, Allen Ginsberg,
Denise Levertov, Andrei Voznesnsky, Kenneth Patchen, Nicannor
Para, Czeslaw Milosz, Adrienne Rich among others. Characterizing
in part what shaped the moral sensibility of this particular
group of poets, Rexroth concluded his article on Kenneth Patchen
stating that
The Moscow Trials, the Kuo-Min-Tang
street executions, the betrayal of Spain, the Hitler-Stalin
Pact, the extermination of whole nations, Hiroshima, Algiers--no
protest has stopped the monster
jaws from closing. As the years go on, fewer and fewer
protests are heard. The spokesman, the intellects of the world
have blackmailed themselves
and are silent. (97)
From his Dakota that is everywhere to his "electric bird
of desire," McGrath speaks to us imaginatively and politically
about the real news of the experience of the world and what
it's like to live in it with moral responsibility. Whereas
poets like Ginsberg, Rukeyser, Rexroth, and Levertov were
visible, charismatic, and in Ginsberg's case celebritized
poetic voices of our ongoing domestic and international social
crises, McGrath's voice was limited to his books and to the
classroom. Yet he was a prophetic and liberatory force. "Eternal
vigilance is the price of Liberty," wrote Thomas Jefferson,
and Thomas McGrath's poetry is part of the American library
that documents that vigilance without denying either the life
of the imagination or the difficult everyday facts of bare
human existence.
Works Cited
Adamic,
Louis. Dynamite. New York: Chelsea House Publishers,
1958.
McGrath,
Thomas. Letter to an Imaginary Friend. Chicago: Swallow
Press, 1970.
Rexroth,
Kenneth. Bird in the Bush: Obvious Essays. New York:
New Directions Books,
1959.
Thompson,
E.P. "Homage to Thomas McGrath." TriQuarterly
#70 Fall (1987).
Twain,
Mark. A Pen Warmed-up in Hell. New York: Harper and
Row, 1972.
|