Louis Untermeyer (1885–1977) edited the very first poetry book I
ever owned. I think it was called The
Golden Treasury of Poetry, and it had a gold paperback cover. There were
lots of poems in it I liked when I was a kid. I remember Oliver Wendell
Holmes’s ballad “The Deacon’s Masterpiece or the Wonderful One-Hoss-Shay.” In
addition to that anthology, Louis Untermeyer wrote or edited more than 100
books. I always thought of him as a compiler of anthologies, and as a figure in
American culture, a sort of intellectual about town.
Louis Untermeyer |
Recently I encountered some poems by Untermeyer in an anthology of poetry on
audiobook, The Spoken Arts Treasury,
Volume 1. It’s a collection full of the U.S. poets who were very popular in
the 1950s, writers we hardly ever read or hear today, such as Mark Van Doren, Allen Tate,
and Conrad Aiken. The collection includes several diamonds, among them the
poems written and read by Louis Untermeyer.
When I heard Untermeyer on this CD, I felt that he was also a
force as a poet. His poems seemed on the surface to be written in a fairly
predictable meter and rhyme scheme, but despite that, they never ceased to
surprise me. Every time I thought I could guess what was coming, Untermeyer
came up with an image or an idea that was completely unexpected—and true.
Here’s one of the poems that grabbed me, a sort of atheist
prayer:
Caliban
in the Coal Mines
You, in Your well-lighted sky,
Warm, with the sun always by.
Fling us a handful of stars!
Untermeyer was known as a champion of the underdog, and this
poem showcases that side. He speaks in the voice of the despised Caliban of
Shakespeare’s The Tempest, more than
half a century before that revisionist view of Caliban became popular. But
Untermeyer’s Caliban is a miner, and one who can speak his mind, even to God. I
love the image of the miner’s headlamp as a moon. And that final image with the
verb “fling”— so powerful, so vivid.
Untermeyer got into quite a lot of trouble for his outspoken
radicalism. In the early days of TV, he made his living and much of his
reputation for several years as a quiz show panelist on the program “What’s My
Line?” This show involved television personalities guessing the occupation of
surprise guests. Here’s a link to a YouTube of one of the
shows, with Untermeyer as a panelist.
Untermeyer lived in New York City, where the program originated.
Imagine what his life was like, recognized by the guy who served him his slice of pizza and the newsboy who sold him the afternoon paper—and their commenting on his good or bad
guesses on last night’s show—the life of a celebrity.
When Joseph McCarthy’s witchhunt of radicals gripped the U.S.A.
in the 1950s, Untermeyer was blacklisted, and overnight, he was fired from “What’s My Line?” with no warning. Imagine the shock, and the blow to
him—he couldn’t go anywhere without everyone asking why he was no longer on the
program. As a result, Untermeyer didn’t leave his apartment or answer the phone
for a year and a half. More on what happened to him in a moment.
God, though this life is but
a wraith,
Although we know not what we use,
Although we grope with little faith,
Give me the heart to fight — and lose.
Although we know not what we use,
Although we grope with little faith,
Give me the heart to fight — and lose.
Ever insurgent let me be,
Make me more daring than devout;
From sleek contentment keep me free,
And fill me with a buoyant doubt.
Make me more daring than devout;
From sleek contentment keep me free,
And fill me with a buoyant doubt.
Open my eyes to visions girt
With beauty, and with wonder lit —
But always let me see the dirt,
And all that spawn and die in it.
With beauty, and with wonder lit —
But always let me see the dirt,
And all that spawn and die in it.
Open my ears to music; let
Me thrill with Spring’s first flutes and drums —
But never let me dare forget
The bitter ballads of the slums.
Me thrill with Spring’s first flutes and drums —
But never let me dare forget
The bitter ballads of the slums.
From compromise and things
half done,
Keep me with stern and stubborn pride;
And when at last the fight is won,
God, keep me still unsatisfied.
Keep me with stern and stubborn pride;
And when at last the fight is won,
God, keep me still unsatisfied.
O.K., there are lines I could lose here, like “Open my ears to
music…” Pretty corny. But what an amazing idea about what to pray for: “Give me
the heart to fight—and lose.” I like the concept of being filled with “buoyant doubt.” And how about that fabulous last line?
So, Untermeyer had the political side of his poetry in order,
even though he paid a terrible price for his commitment. In fact, he persisted
long enough to outlive his enemies. When President John F. Kennedy took office
in 1961, Untermeyer was appointed the Consultant in English Poetry for the
Library of Congress, a position that was then the equivalent of U.S. Poet Laureate.
Untermeyer’s career came full circle from a political
standpoint. But he was not only a political poet from an economic perspective.
Consider this poem, a fascinating take on the battle of the sexes, especially
coming from a man:
The Wise Woman
His eyes
grow hot, his words grow wild;
He swears to break the mold and
leave her.
She smiles
at him as at a child
That’s touched with fever.
She smoothes
his ruffled wings, she leans
To comfort, pamper and restore
him;
And when he
sulks or scowls, she preens
His
feathers for him.
He hungers
after stale regrets.
Nourished
by what she offers gaily;
And all he
thinks he never gets
She feeds him daily.
He lusts for
freedom; cries how long
Must he be
bound by what controlled him!
Yet he is
glad the chains are strong.
And that they hold him.
She knows he
feels all this, but she
Is far too
wise to let him know it;
He needs to
nurse the agony
That suits a poet.
He laughs to
see her shape his life.
As she
half-coaxes, halt-commands him;
And groans
it’s hard to have a wife
Who understands him.
That odd pattern of syllables in each stanza—lines of
8, 9, 8, and then a shorter line of 5 beats—it felt familiar. Why? It's exactly the same unusual metric that Edward Arlington Robinson
created for his famous poem, “Miniver Cheevy.” Like “Miniver Cheevy,”
Untermeyer’s “The Wise Woman” is a deeply ironic portrait of a man
(Untermeyer’s title notwithstanding). That last five-syllable line in each
stanza functions almost like a punch line, undermining the more traditional and
heroic gait of the first three, longer lines in the stanza.
Untermeyer describes the husband in this poem in
the third person, but I can’t imagine this is anyone but the author. He even
identifies the husband as a poet. Maybe the third person allowed him that
ironic distance and a chance to see himself from his wife’s standpoint. The
speaker fantasizes a more promiscuous life, all the while comfortable within his marriage,
even when he does and doesn’t realize it. “The Wise Woman” is an interesting
take on how men and women dance together in a long-term relationship, giving much
of the credit to the woman for her wisdom, understanding, and warmth.
Untermeyer came from a Jewish-American family,
and his spirit feels very Jewish to me. That combination of warmth, sardonic
humor, and compassion for the oppressed is as Jewish as a bagel and schmear.
Not that Jews have a monopoly on any of those traits—or on bagels and schmears,
at this point in history.
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Malik: Thanks for your encouraging words. I'm glad you're enjoying the blog.
ReplyDeleteZack
Thanks for posting this. I'm writing a book about his circle of friends from the 1910's to the 1930's, and have come to like and appreciate Louis as you do. - Becky Bradway
ReplyDeleteBecky: Glad this blog was useful to you. That's intriguing that you're writing a book about Louis Untermeyer and his circle. Sounds like an excellent topic.
ReplyDeleteZack