Can Poetry Save the Earth?: A Field Guide to Nature Poems

(Ann) #1

220 PA RT T W O


Snail, snail, glister me forward,
Bird, soft-sigh me home.
Worm, be with me.
This is my hard time.

His happy marriage in 1953 buoyed the spirit—“I knew a woman, lovely in
her bones”—yet later poems from the northwest pursue a “long journey out
of the self ” into “raw places / Where the shale slides dangerously.” His line
lengthens:


The arroyo cracking the road, the wind-bitten buttes, the canyons,
Creeks swollen in midsummer from the flash-flood roaring into the narrow
valley.

Moving into these straits, his lines can close in too:


The way blocked at last by a fallen fir-tree,
The thickets darkening,
The ravines ugly.

In the Michigan greenhouse poems, things germinating matched his own grow-
ing pains. Now the west holds out a starker psychic landscape.
North American Sequence enters place after place to “move as the mind moves”:
to “be a stream, winding between great striated rocks in late summer”; to “rock
with the motion of morning, /... By the lapping of water”; to “rise and fall
in the slow sea of a grassy plain”; to “live with the rocks, their weeds, / Their
filmy fringes of green”; to “sway outside myself / Into the darkening currents.”
The Pacific Northwest, Puget Sound, Olympic Peninsula become an existential
test site. Roethke ’s terrain, “half-land, half-water,” blends life and death for
him, “becoming and perishing, /... Gathering to itself sound and silence— /
Mine and the sea-wind ’s.”
As Roethke pushes from small things and greenhouse fleshliness toward the
mind ’s “far field,” contraries coexist. A Yeatsian poem intones prophetically,


In a dark time, the eye begins to see,
I meet my shadow in the deepening shade...
A man goes far to find out what he is—
Death of the self in a long, tearless night.

Then he seizes the rhyme to see “All natural shapes blazing unnatural light,” like
Blake. Yet unlike Blake he never abhors the physical world in favor of pure vi-
sion. Roethke ’s late poems cleave to some topographic “place of my desire.”
His landscapes and seascapes are anything but idyllic, with daffodils glisten-
ing beside a breezy lake. Often dusty and scraggly, they stay touchable: rocks,
waters, plants, animals. Sooner than most poets, Roethke ’s eye caught man-
made waste and spoilage. When a boy digging moss to line cemetery baskets,

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