Tuesday, July 29, 2008

The Poetry of War



A Terrible Beauty: The Poetry of War

CAS prof James Winn examines war from Homer to Springsteen
By Bari Walsh

James Winn, a CAS professor of English, says poetry can help us make sense of war’s brutality and nobility.

Poets from Homer to Whitman to Bob Dylan have found a powerful subject in war. Poetry has comforted, condemned, praised, and mourned, articulating the contradictions of war’s brutality and nobility. And poets do more than help us make sense of past conflicts, as James Winn, a College of Arts and Sciences professor of English, argues in his new book, The Poetry of War (Cambridge University Press). Reading great poetry, he writes, can act as an antidote to “the mindless simplifications of war propaganda,” making us wiser judges of present battles. As violence rages today in Iraq, Sudan, and Gaza, poetry gives us a language to describe and transcend the horror. Winn, who was recently appointed the new director of the Boston University Humanities Foundation, spoke with BU Today about his book.

BU Today: What can poetry tell us about war that news accounts or history books cannot?
Winn: For journalists, and even for historians, war is a contest. One side wins, the other loses; the balance of power in some part of the world may change as a result. But poetry is an ideal form for expressing ambiguity, and thus for describing the heroism of the vanquished, the intolerable cost of so-called victory, and above all, the complex and contradictory feelings of all those touched by war.

You organize your book thematically, with sections on honor, shame, empire, chivalry, comradeship, and liberty. How do those themes help us understand the poets’ experience of war?
Well, all of those themes recur in different cultures and languages, and at different times, and while I always want to respect the particularity of those circumstances, I’ve also learned a lot by setting what Homer says about shame next to poems of shame from the Vietnam era, or by thinking about the way 18th-century poets created the myth of liberty that politicians still invoke today, even though the politicians have no idea where the ideas they are using originated.

As their world recedes from our own, ancient poets are sometimes perceived as triumphalists or spinners of highly glossed adventure yarns. And yet, as you say, Homer tells some “terrible truths” about the horrors of the battlefield.
It would be a gross misreading to call Homer a triumphalist. His sympathy for the losers is strong and clear, and among the terrible truths he expresses is the emptiness of victory. As his original hearers knew, the victorious Greek general Agamemnon would come home to find his wife living with another man and would promptly be murdered by her. Virgil is a more complex case. He was writing at the request of the emperor Augustus, and his poem praises the Romans as a people destined to rule the world. At the same time, however, Virgil’s poem is deeply sensitive to the cost of empire, the loss of freedom that comes with conquest.

Talk about how wartime poets evoke beauty from violent and bloody scenes.
For poets in many periods, war was a prime instance of the sublime, an experience bringing together awe, terror, power, and reverence on a grand scale. When Yeats writes of the “terrible beauty” of the Easter Rising of 1916, he may be thinking of the way the English put down the revolution by indiscriminately shelling the center of Dublin, starting fires that burned much of the city. In acknowledging the beauty inherent in fire and destruction, Yeats participates in a long tradition stretching back to Homer. Eighteenth-century poets, convinced that “good wars” could advance the inevitable progress of mankind toward freedom, democracy, and brotherhood, often connected the magnificence of warfare to the supposed nobility of its aims. Their words helped create the idea of a “war to end all wars.”

Soldiers returning for their second and third tours of duty in Iraq often say they owe it to their buddies to go back. What do poems have to say about the bonds that soldiers form?
As ideas that once provided motivation for soldiers — honor, glory, and even liberty — lose their force, comradeship continues to be a very powerful motive for combat. Societies that are otherwise deeply homophobic, terrified of close relationships between men, treat the close bonds formed by combatants quite differently, not only tolerating but actually encouraging those bonds. Some of the most touching poems I found in the course of my research express those feelings. Let me quote just one stanza, from a poem written by Robert Graves to his friend and fellow officer Siegfried Sassoon:

Show me the two so closely bound
As we, by the wet bond of blood,
By friendship blossoming from mud,
By Death: we faced him, and we found
Beauty in Death,
In dead men, breath.

By calling the force that binds the two men “the wet bond of blood,” Graves bravely acknowledges the softer aspects of his feelings for Sassoon. A friendship blossoming from mud suggests the conventional motif of the flower that springs from a grave, but it also allows the two males a metaphorical fertility. All of this rich imagery, however, is a prelude to the revelation of the true bonding force: Death. By staring Death in the face, Graves claims, the two men found beauty. From the dead men all around them, they drew breath.

What is your favorite poem in this genre, and why?
An unfair question, especially unfair to ask someone who read thousands of war poems in preparing to write this book. It also asks me to compare apples and oranges. The great ancient poems on war are huge, sweeping epics, with the power that comes from narrative. More recent poems are shorter, more intense. Randall Jarrell’s “The Death of the Ball-Turret Gunner,” perhaps the greatest poem to emerge from World War II, is only five lines long. I love it, and I love the Iliad, and I love “Born in the U.S.A.” But you’ll appreciate my reluctance to choose among works so different in size and scope.

As you immersed yourself in this poetry, did your own feelings about war change?
Of course. Like many people in my generation, my most immediate experience with war was the war in Vietnam. Although I was lucky enough not to go there, I did get drafted in 1968 and found my time in the Army pointless and frustrating. So it was instructive to read poems by soldiers who genuinely believed in the rightness of the wars they were fighting. I remain deeply skeptical of war as a means of bringing about change, but I respect the determination and heroism of soldier-poets from many eras, and I have tried, in my book, to honor their memory.

America At The Bat



America at the Bat

The outlook wasn't brilliant for America in that war,
They had not had the initiative since the Election of '04,
So when Colin Powell left office,and Tony Blair did the same,
Finger-Pointing broke out amongst those playing the White House Game.

The horribly marred Bush would soon go, leaving there the rest,
The corruption that springs eternal in the politician's breast,
For they all thought, "If only I could get a whack at that,
I'd solve this whole Iraq-War mess if I was at the bat."

But Obama was a forerunner, and so was Hillary, for goodness sake,

For the former was inexperienced, and the latter was a fake,
So as the the campaigns began, the American Army frowned as they sat,
For it seemed none of these would-be Presidents would step up to bat.

But Obama had some ideas, to the wonderment of all,
And so did Hillary, though her plans would just make the war stall,
And when the election had settled, and voters saw what had occurred,
There was Hillary heading for office, with promises previously heard.

But back in Baghdad, from the ghettos, where the terrorists all dwell,
The insurgents peered over the war-torn buildings, and let out a mighty yell,
And the brave-hearted American soldiers got up from where they sat,
For whoever was in charge, they'd fight their best, and that was that.

These men took up the call and rushed into the streets with timely grace,
And each man wore a look of determination upon his face,
And as these brave men gave their lives, Hillary Rodham Clinton sat,
Having a hard time making a decision; she just could not step up to bat.

Ten thousand plus coalition troops total had bit the dirt,
Three thousand plus of those were U.S. soldiers, mortally hurt,
And so now, on this urban battleground, the insurgents let rip,
And one of their bullets found an American troop and ended his Iraq trip.

And as the bullets glanced off buildings, and knifed through the air,
And American troops fought for freedom in the ever-present despair,
And as men lost limbs to snipers and bombs, and brave men fell dead,
Hillary talked of failure; "Strike one!" the Public said.

And from the House of Representatives there arose a mighty roar,
The citizens demanded answers to what was going on in the war,
"Kill it! Kill Hillary's war plan!" shouted a Congressman,
And it's likely they'd have killed it had Obama not raised his hand.

So the American troops stayed put amongst the rubble and the stone,
Hillary's war plan was too soft, it made the war go on,
And back into the fray went American men, and again the bullets flew,
But Hillary was soft with the insurgents, and the Public said "Strike two!"

"Fraud!" cried the Senator from Texas, and the others answered "Fraud!",
But one scornful look from Obama and the Congressmen were awed,
Hillary was visibly nervous now, she was showing considerable strain,
And she got the awful feeling she would not get elected again.

The sneer was gone from Hillary's lips, her teeth were clenched in hate,
And now the whole Congress was discussing the Iraq War and matters of State,
And as the Senators squabbled, and Hillary and the Public had a row,
The average soldier still continued to take many a bullet and blow.

Oh, maybe someday we'll get a leader who can see the end in sight,
Who can identify with the soldiers in the midst of this great fight,
But for the moment there is terror in Iraq, and insurgents smile and shout,
But there's no smiling in America: Our leaders have all struck out.

D.J. Goldberg

Call And Answer


Call and Answer

Tell me why it is we don’t lift our voices these days
And cry over what is happening. Have you noticed
The plans are made for Iraq and the ice cap is melting?

I say to myself: “Go on, cry. What’s the sense
Of being an adult and having no voice? Cry out!
See who will answer! This is Call and Answer!”

We will have to call especially loud to reach
Our angels, who are hard of hearing; they are hiding
In the jugs of silence filled during our wars.

Have we agreed to so many wars that we can’t
Escape from silence? If we don’t lift our voices, we allow
Others (who are ourselves) to rob the house.

How come we’ve listened to the great criers—Neruda,
Akhmatova, Thoreau, Frederick Douglass—and now
We’re silent as sparrows in the little bushes?

Some masters say our life lasts only seven days.
Where are we in the week? Is it Thursday yet?
Hurry, cry now! Soon Sunday night will come.

robert Bly

War Is Living


~War Is Living~


War is living ~ Yet, people die,
This simple fact ~ Makes men cry,
Democracy is a wonderful word,
However, some believe it’s absurd,
Some hate this beautiful land,
Fearing what they can’t understand,
So they fight ~ So they kill,
Trying to break the back of free will,
They see pride as an evil plight,
They can’t see freedom with no insight,
In darkness they were born ~ And prefer,
Their life isn’t living ~ It’s what they endure.
~~~
War is living ~ And death tolls grow,
Wishing it over ~ Doesn’t make it so,
Is fighting this war wrong or right,
Is there an answer within sight?
How do you leave a people in need,
A country that’s broken and people that bleed?
Hope and happiness doesn’t roam the streets,
Car bombs and gunfire never retreats,
Children can’t just run and play,
Death awaits and never sways,
No where is safe ~ Every day’s the same,
Is freedom worth it ~ Or, is it to blame?
~~~
War is living ~ Hate does spread,
What once was a dream ~ Has become dread,
A government is trying to form,
Trying to find it’s way in a street war storm,
Elected officials die in the streets,
Making life better is no easy feat,
Echoes from the past call out so clear,
“It wasn’t that bad,” the voice said with a tear,
What is the truth? Let them speak,
Let them say “Fight or Retreat,”
Not the Government or Heads of State,
Let the people speak ~ For it is their fate.
~~~
War is living ~ War is hell,
How do you break ~ An evil spell,
How do you know when it’s time to let go,
Time to say ~ “You’re on your own.”
How do you come home ~ When so many died,
How do you explain to the wounded vets who tried?
What do you say to the mothers that cry,
About their children who had to die?
What of the wives and husbands at home,
Who cry in the night because they’re alone?
Talk of the children without moms and dads,
Explain to them ~ Why this war was had.

Anonymous

Monday, July 28, 2008

Poems From The Bottom of A Bottle



I.
confused in my samhadi
restless tags struggling to define these words
you can tell me humanity doesnt matter, but

i can see cold black space like you cannot
the connections are part of me
the planets are my mind -- the warm breath of a lover
is no less real than you, my brother
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

II.
you kill with your complacence
you kill with your apathy
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

III.
your blood is on my hands
take it, i dont want it any more
its rightfully yours -- take it, brother

take this suffering, take the world
off my shoulders, out of my mind
take what you asked for
and carry it yourself, you
golem, you construct of evil

hypocrites, you run the world
but you cant understand that i speak to you

what pain has been granted me?
why do i see as you sit there, blind?

why should i care that you kill each other?
perhaps because i alone am human.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

IV.
the ocean, it
it calls to me
the tears of all those mothers, washing up
endlessly in countless waves of grief

always calling, always calling me
home
home at last
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

V.
the brooks i drank from, as a boy
ice cold on a fall morning, i recall

hard as a rock, soft like a mother's forgiveness
clear like pain and love and understanding, liquid and crystal and undeniable

gentle, like rain after all that death.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

VI.
a gun, a gun
my kingdom for a gun
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

VII.
so one day,
i was lying in the gun truck, trying to sleep
because i volunteered for everything those days, because i wanted to die
and i was one of only two 50 cal gunners available, and i was the one who volunteered
so i was lying there, trying to sleep, and i heard a sound
like the earth breaking apart, and i looked up, and the sky was white, white with fire

and then there was the wailing, and the burning flesh, and i was ready
i was ready to fight, but there was noone there, noone to fight, noone to shoot
i was ready to kill, but instead there was only the smell of burning flesh, and i was helping
i was helping to carry you into the hospital, as you burned alive
as i smelled your skin falling off
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

VIII.
sometimes the only thing thats there
is the tangled intricacies of the primes
the inscutable dance that holds the mysteries of the framework of the universe

in the gray predawn, they march past
they walk in the song of the crickets, the steps of the small swallows
that nervously hunt for food, struggling for survival

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

IX.
finally it comes
the ocean, cresting
rolling down my cheeks, like tears

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

X.
Unknowingly we plough the dust of stars,
blown around us by the wind, and
drink the universe in a glass of rain. -- Ihab Hassan

therefore,

No man is an island, intire of it selfe; every man
is a peece of the Continent, a part of the maine; if
Clod bee washed away by the Sea, Europe is the lesse,
as well as if a Promontorie were, as well as if a Mannor
of thy friends or of thine owne were; any mans death
diminishes me, because I am involved in Mankinde; And
therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls;
It tolls for thee. -- John Donne

therefore,

everything else follows.

Ihab Hassan

The Cowboy



You might say that much of what I have posted recently is anti-war, and anti-Bush, and you would be right. So here and there I am including some poetry by Bush supporters, by misguided patriots, and others who have faith that Junior knows what he is doing, and he has our welfare in the forefront of his saddlebags.

Glenn

The Cowboy" by Julie Redick pays tribute to President Bush:

They call him a cowboy, as they attempt to hide
From all their own failures, for they let the threat ride.
Terrorism building, zeroing in from all sides.
Selling out the country for political pride.
For eight years they played with our country's life.
"Leave all to the cowboy, he'll buckle under the strife."
Now they seem to have forgotten that autumn day
When their failures came to life in a horrific way.
Tearfully but firmly, the "cowboy" began to sing
Hymns for 3,000 souls that had suddenly taken wing.

There is more they've forgotten in their attempt to deride:
Those "cowboys" before him that we once hailed with pride.
Those men who risked everything for good over bad.
Founding Fathers and others--the best that we had.
Sons, brothers, fathers and husbands went forth
Taking up arms to bravely ensure democracy's worth.
Risking everything they had for liberty & freedom
For the cowards of today the right to spout all their venom.

So, they call him a "cowboy," and thank God he is.
He rides strong, firm and high in that saddle of his.
Most of us will never forget his words of that day
That are etched in our memory as he had his say.
"We will not forget, falter or fail."
Thus our fight for freedom will never pale.
Call him what you will--Our Constitution you enjoy.
Just remember all our heroes have once been cowboys;
Cowboys who shed blood to keep everyone free.
Starting with a call for Independence by decree.
Never backing down from all the Hitlers among men
Who would seek to undermine what we have always been.

Freedom and liberty started with the dreams of a few
Who then passed it down as a precious gift to you.
If you have the courage to defend all you enjoy.
Then set your course remembering
all our heroes have been "cowboys."

Julie Redick

Familiar Names


Familiar Names

Familiar names on a marble wall,
cambered, black, and much too tall.
By choice or by chance, we answered the call,
and the war made horrors, horrors of all.

So far away, too young you see,
It's no return that's bothering me.
The spirit to laugh and the joy to be,
help me find them again, set me free!

Corruption, graft, and too much sin,
bar the door, don't let him in.
Easy to lose and tough to win,
for twenty years since, where you been?

A nation of homeless and jailed we are,
It's expected you see, consider it par.
Watergate, arms deals, politicians with gall,
war will make whores, whores of all.

Twenty years later, another new war,
when can we shout "Horrors No More!"
War's dying children should make us all wince,
remember it well, catch a good glimpse.

Twenty years forward, we can look with hope,
citizen, politician, even the next Pope.
To find the right answer to war's timely call,
by not rushing right in, making horrors of all.


----Anonymous