Monday, November 3, 2008

Each Time I Love I Find It Still My Own

Dorothy Parker was an American extreme. Her loves gave the tabloids something to write about. She shocked the middle class morality of her time. She, by turns, failed to stay with her man, or failed to keep him with her. Desperately sad as some episodes of her life were, she was able to mock her own folly in them and turned them into stories and poems that had America laughing with her. She walked a very fine line between being seen as an outrageously clever - though baudy - character and becoming an object of pity and scorn.

But, in public at least, she kept to the profitable side of that line. She was one of the most sought after speakers; in America she was as popular as Mark Twain had once been.

This feat was possible only because, radical though her life was, she never quite lost the underpinnings of the morality which governed her audience and her own upbringing. As Leland Ryken has so well argued (Realms of Gold), comedy cannot work without common assent to a common morality. It was that sense of the right, and the clarity with which she saw herself out of sinc with it, that fueled her genius. Even in her most antagonistic work there is always a strong current of longing for something else: a longing for love to 'work,' for love to be eternal.

In the end we do not judge her for we always find that she has already judged herself.

I could post others of her poems, for many of them are brilliant, but for now I will stick to a few of her sonnets.


I Know I Have Been Happiest

I know I have been happiest at your side;
But what is done, is done, and all's to be.
And small the good, to linger dolefully--
Gayly it lived, and gallantly it died.
I will not make you songs of hearts denied,
And you, being man, would have no tears of me,
And should I offer you fidelity,
You'd be, I think, a little terrified.

Yet this the need of woman, this her curse;
To range her little gifts, and give, and give,
Because the throb of giving's sweet to bear.
To you, who never begged me vows or verse,
My gift shall be my absense, while I live;
But after that, my dear, I cannot swear.


Testament

Oh, let it be a night of lyric rain
And singing breezes, when my bell is tolled.
I have so loved the rain that I would hold
Last in my ears its friendly, dim refrain.
I shall lie cool and quiet, who have lain
Fevered, and watched the book of day unfold.
Death will not see me flinch; the heart is bold
That pain has made incapable of pain.

Kinder the busy worms than ever love;
It will be peace to lie there, empty-eyed,
My bed made secret by the leveling showers.
My breast repleneshing the weeds above.
And you will say of me, "Then has she died?
Perhaps I should have sent a spray of flowers."


I Shall Come Back

I shall come back without fanfaronade
Of wailing wind and graveyard panoply:
But, trembling, slip from cool Eternity--
A mild and most bewildered little shade.
I shall not make sepulchral midnight raid,
But softly come where I had longed to be
In April twilight's unsung melody,
And I, not you, shall be the one afraid.

Strange, that from lovely dreamings of the dead
I shall come back to you, who hurt me most.
You may not feel my hand upon your head,
I'll be so new and inexpert a ghost.
Perhaps you will not know that I am near--
And that will break my ghostly heart, my dear.


A Portrait

Because my love is quick to come and go--
A little here, and then a little there--
What use are any words of mine to swear
My heart is stubborn, and my spirit slow
Of weathering the drip and drive of woe?
What is my oath, when you have but to bare
My little, easy loves; and I can dare
Only to shrug, and answer, "They are so"?

You do not know how heavy a heart it is
That hangs about my neck--a clumsy stone
Cut with a birth, a death, a bridal-day.
Each time I love, I find it still my own,
Who take it, now to that lad, now to this,
Seeking to give the wretched thing away.



I've gotten one sonnet in answer to the Challenge. Anyone else want to write one to be posted on the 12th? If you don't know what I'm talking about, read "A Challenge" a few posts below.

11 comments:

The Realistic Dreamer said...

just passing by ;)

love love love the "I Know I Have Been Happiest" bit

Doug P. Baker said...

Good to see you, Grace.

Devika Jyothi said...

Hi Doug,

Dorothy parker -- read her somtime a bit of this and a bit of that sitting at American centre..

never got a full view...but i feel for these lines...as though she had written it mostly for me...

thats the essence of literary appreciation may be..but still, its so much of a solace to my mind now

thanks!
devika

Rethabile said...

You might enjoy my friend Steve's blods. They are Khanya and Notes From Underground. 'Khanya' is sesotho (my mother tongue) for 'Light'.

Best

Doug P. Baker said...

Devika,

So nice to hear from you! I'm glad that the poems struck a chord for you.

God be with you!

Doug P. Baker said...

Rethabile,

Thanks for the suggestion. I'll check them out.

By the way, to anyone who hasn't been there, Rethabile has a very impressive blog, http://poefrika.blogspot.com/ that is mostly African poetry. He posts some really great poetry on it as well as interesting news relating mostly to poetry in Africa. I highly recommend visiting his site and checking out the poem of the day or the old poems of the week. I used a few poems from there back when I taught world literature. There is a link somewhere down the left side of my blog that will take you right to Poefrika.

Shandra Lorne said...

Until now, the only Parker poem I'd ever read was "Resume." Oh, and I have a postage stamp with her face on it. I did not know what a clear, honest voice she had! I like that first poem there and how she's not sugar-coating her feelings or his or wallowing in self-pity.

Nice blog!

Doug P. Baker said...

Shandra, thank you!

Yes, she really does supersede her reputation, which still sees her largely as a baudy comic figure.

Once I get over this sonnet obsession that I'm going through at the moment, maybe I'll post some of her other poetry.

Rethabile said...

Please don't get over your sonnet obsession. And thanks for the nod.

sebastiao garcia said...

hey Doug P. Baker, you said you want to see more of my writing i have post a few new poem in my blog check the november and the october check as well the old post they quite good, stay well from sebastiao "splited mind"

Doug P. Baker said...

Hello Sebastio,

I'll check it out.