Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Your toes show it

Two poems I haven't really thought about since high school made a return in the last days. The more serious was Keats' "Ode on a Grecian Urn," part of which I read in the course of explaining Horace Kallen's 1939 essay "Beauty and Use" for our New School history course.
I'm not sure my reading was very good (though I did practice many times), but I hope my pluck at least made students sit up and take notice. None would admit to having caught the reference in the Kallen essay or even knowing the poem, so although I joined Kallen in criticizing the poem's desire for a beauty so pure it was immaterial and outside time, one of them might years from now thank me for introducing them to Keats. (The teaching life!)

The other poem is from Don Marquis's series about Archy the cockroach and his alley cat friend Mehitabel (about the same time as the emerging New School, come to think of it). I've tried lazily to recover it several times over the years, finally succeeding last night with some visiting friends. It's quite as splendid as I recalled, though much longer - I remembered mainly the bit starting at line 12 and ending with the beetle saying "amen." I'm not sure where or why I will have encountered this poem as a child; glad to be reconnected to it, though!

the robin and the worm 
a robin said to an
angleworm as he ate him
i am sorry but a bird
has to live somehow the
worm being slow witted could
not gather his
dissent into a wise crack
and retort he was
effectually swallowed
before he could turn
a phrase
by the time he had 
reflected long enough
to say but why must a
bird live
he felt the beginnings 
of a gradual change
invading him
some new and disintegrating 
influence
was stealing along him
from his positive
to his negative pole
and he did not have 
the mental stamina
of a jonah to resist the
insidious
process of assimilation
which comes like a thief
in the night
demons and fishhooks
he exclaimed
i am losing my personal
identity as a worm
my individuality
is melting away from me
odds craw i am becoming
part and parcel of
this bloody robin
so help me i am thinking
like a robin and not
like a worm any
longer yes yes i even
find myself agreeing
that a robin must live
i still do not
understand with my mentality
why a robin must live
and yet i swoon into a 
condition of belief
yes yes by heck that is
my dogma and i shout it a
robin must live
amen said a beetle who had
preceded him into the 
interior that is the way i
feel myself is it not
wonderful when one arrives 
at the place
where he can give up his
ambitions and resignedly
nay even with gladness
recognize that it is a far
far better thing to be 
merged harmoniously
in the cosmic all
and this confortable situation
in his midst
so affected the marauding 
robin that he perched
upon a blooming twig
and sang until the
blossoms shook with ecstacy
he sang
i have a good digestion
and there is a god after all
which i was wicked 
enough to doubt
yesterday when it rained
breakfast breakfast
i am full of breakfast
and they are at breakfast
in heaven
they breakfast in heaven
all s well with the world
so intent was this pious and
murderous robin
on his own sweet song
that he did not notice
mehitabel the cat
sneaking toward him
she pounced just as he
had extended his larynx
in a melodious burst of
thanksgiving and
he went the way of all
flesh fish and good red herring
a ha purred mehitabel
licking the last
feather from her whiskers
was not that a beautiful
song he was singing
just before i took him to
my bosom
they breakfast in heaven
all s well with the world
how true that is
and even yet his song
echoes in the haunted
woodland of my midriff
peace and joy in the world
and over all the 
provident skies
how beautiful is the universe
when something digestible meets
with an eager digestion
how sweet the embrace
when atom rushes to the arms
of waiting atom
and they dance together
skimming with fairy feet
along a tide of gastric juices
oh feline cosmos you were
made for cats
and in the spring
old cosmic thing
i dine and dance with you
i shall creep through
yonder tall grass
to see if peradventure
some silly fledgling thrushes
newly from the nest
be not floundering therein
i have a gusto this
morning i have a hunger
i have a yearning to hear 
from my stomach
further music in accord with
the mystic chanting
of the spheres of the stars that
sang together in the dawn of
creation prophesying food
for me i have a faith
that providence has hidden for me
in yonder tall grass
still more
ornithological delicatessen
oh gayly let me strangle
what is gayly given
well well boss there is
something to be said
for the lyric and imperial
attitude
believe that everything is for
you until you discover 
that you are for it
sing your faith in what you
get to eat right up to the
minute you are eaten
for you are going 
to be eaten
will the orchestra please
strike up that old
tutankhamen jazz while i dance
a few steps i learnt from an
egyptian scarab and some day i
will narrate to you the most
merry light headed wheeze
that the skull of yorick put
across in answer to the 
melancholy of the dane and also
what the ghost of
hamlet s father replied to the skull
not forgetting the worm that
wriggled across one of the picks
the grave diggers had left behind
for the worm listened and winked
at horatio while the skull and the
ghost and prince talked
saying there are more things
twixt the vermiform appendix
and nirvana than are dreamt of
in thy philosophy horatio
fol de riddle fol de rol
must every parrot be a poll
                          archy