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Winter Hours
by Mary Oliver
Houghton Mifflin, 2000
Paper, 144 pages
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Critiquing Mary Oliver's Winter
Hours: Prose, Prose Poems and Poems is a difficult task.
"Reader," she offers in the foreword's
first sentence, "you may call what follows a
collection of essays," and she cites Samuel
Johnson: "I don't mean his persuasions and
logics, but his ruminations and conversations,"
and asks us to consider these pieces "parts of a
conversation or a long and slowly arriving
lettersomewhat disorderly, natural in
expression, and happily unfinished." And for
those who balk at her approach, she is "loyal to
the experiences of [her] own life and not, as is
required in the more designed arts, to the needs of
the line or the paragraph." She writes, she says
"out of meditation and memory," not
"out of imagination and invention." What
follows is a journal of meditations, a kind of
daybook roughed into order, with a section of
critical pieces based on talks given to writing
classes bracketed by a mixed bag of prose poems and
personal essays that blend anecdote with broad
philosophical speculations. It's a fan's book, along
the lines of one of those volumes that follow a hit
independent film, the auteur's filming diary, along
with shooting script, sketches and pictures from the
set.
The book's backbone is its theme: the paradox that
sets nature and mystical inspiration against the
civilizing forces of craft and discipline. It's a
paradox that restates itself differently in every
piece of the book, whether the subject is poetry or,
as in the book's first essay, in the contrast between
two "Makers," to use the old Scot word for
poet. One is "The Young Builder," an
instinctive and skilled carpenter who is a passionate
writer, though his enthusiasm for writing outstrips
his gifts. Oliver, on the other hand, is an awkward
builder, but an expert poet.
The carpenter's skill is a metaphor for a kind of
accomplished craft, the sort of natural simplicity
and grace Oliver strives for in her life; however,
she recognizes that this is different from the grace
she strives for in poetry. Art emerges from a
catalyzing conflict between inspiration and the
necessary resistance and release craft provides.
Oliver's obsession with the paradox that the writer
seeks, the almost mystical inspiration through the
disciplined practice and observation is recast
throughout the book, seed and meat-eater, creation
and destruction, first draft and revision,
procreation, destruction. In the essay "Sister
Turtle," which documents Oliver's encounter with
a nest of turtle eggs, she writes:
The poet Shelley believed his
body would at last be the total and docile
servant of his intellect if he ate nothing but
leaves and fruitand I am devoted to
Shelley. But I am devoted to Nature too, and to
consider Nature without this appetitethis
other-creature-consuming appetiteis to look
with shut eyes upon the miraculous interchange
that makes things work, that causes one thing to
nurture another, that creates the future out of
the past. Still, in my personal life, I am often
stricken with a wish to be beyond all that.
I am burdened with anxiety. Anxiety for the lamb
with his bitter future, anxiety for my own body,
and, not least, for my own soul.
The critical sketches at the book's center
meditate on the poetry of Poe, Whitman, Frost, and
Hopkins as efforts to master, through formal
innovation, states of rapture, ecstasy, anxiety, and
despair. She writes in her essay on Poe:
...most of us have had some
real enough experience with certainty.... Poe had
none.... This lack disordered him. It is not a
spiritual lack, but rather a lack of emotional
organization, of confidence... a lack of
confidence in the world entire, and its
benevolent as well as malevolent
possibilities.... He was, forever, reliving an
inescapable, original woe.
At the same time he was both a
powerful constructor of narrative and a perfect
acrobat of language.
Of Whitman, Oliver questions: "Was Whitman a
mystic? For myself," she admits, "I cannot
answer the question except to say that surely he was
a religious poet in the same sense that Emerson was a
religious man, for whom life itself was light,"
but she acknowledges "Whitman's persuading
force, which is his sincerity; and we feel what the
poem tries continually to be: the replication of a
miracle."
But as Gershom Scholem observed in a different
context, it's one thing to have a mystical
experience, another to write it down. Likewise, it's
one thing to read about one and another to have one.
And, as Oliver herself writes, "The poem in
which the reader does not feel himself or herself a
participant is a lecture... the point is not what the
poet would make of it, but what the reader would make
of it."
At it's best, the work is concrete, vivid in its
simplicity.
All of a sudden she began to
whistle. By all of a sudden I mean that for more
than thirty years she had not whistled.
The Whistler
Into this Passage I dug, until
my fingers felt the first of the eggs-round,
slightly soft-then I began to feel more, and I
began to remove them. There were twenty-seven,
smaller than ping pong balls, which they somewhat
resembled. They were not altogether opaque, but
cast a slightly yellow interior light.
Sister Turtle
What I want to describe in my
poems is the prick of the instant... when the
yellow wasps comes, in Fall, to my wrist and then
to my plate, to ramble at the edges of a smear of
honey.
Winter Hours
But, her tendency is toward antique inversions and
lines that dramatize without clarifying. "Said
the poet Robert Frost..." and "I wanted to
build, in the other way, with the teeth of the saw,
and the explosions of the hammer, and the little
shrieks of the screws winding down into their perfect
nests." When she writes, "today, the honey
locust blossoms, in batter, will make the finest
crepes of the most common pancakes," the
miraculous is lost in sentimental clich�. It's as if
Oliver, in her attempt to communicate her deep
connection with nature, cranks up the intensity of
the language. The Mary Oliver we meet in this book is
spontaneous, open, very serious and playful; the
voice throughout is earnest, ardent, moral and
honest, but the prose calls attention to itself,
rather than to the things and experiences described.
Despite the book's suggestion that serious
business is afootIt takes eleven pages of
Garamond adobe type, like rows of antique tables and
chairs to reach the first essay, including four title
pages, an epigram, a three page foreword, a two page
table of contents, and an Other Books page almost as
long as the flavor list at a Ben and Jerry's Scoop
Shopthis is truly a fan's book. "I have
felt all my life that I was wise, and tasteful too,
to speak very little about myselfto deflect the
curiosity in the personal self that descends upon
writers, especially in this country and at this
time," but she does believe she is at a moment
in her life and career when she finds "a
compelling reason to write something revealing, a
little, my private and natural self...." As a
Yiddish teacher I once had said of my great uncle
whose second wife was an ex-nun, "He's raised
Jewish children. He's entitled." So, I suppose,
is Mary Oliver.
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