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Chapter 10: Late Twentieth Century and Postmodernism
W(illiam) S(tanley) Merwin
1927-2019
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Paul Reuben
September 14, 2019, 2019
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Source: New Hampshire Public Radio
W. S. Merwin 1927–2019 (from the Poetry Foundation)
William Stanley (W.S.) Merwin was born in New York City in 1927 and
raised in New Jersey and Scranton, Pennsylvania, the son of a
Presbyterian minister. His
numerous collections of poetry, his translations, and his books of
prose have won praise over seven decades. Though his early poetry
received great attention and
admiration, Merwin would continue to alter and innovate his craft with
each new book, and at each stage he served as a powerful influence for
poets of his
generation and younger poets. For the entirety of his writing career,
he explored a sense of wonder and celebrated the power of language,
while serving as a staunch
anti-war activist and advocate for the environment. He won nearly every
award available to an American poet, and he was named U.S. poet
laureate twice. A
practicing Buddhist as well as a proponent of deep ecology, Merwin
lived since the late 1970s on an old pineapple plantation in Hawaii
which he has painstakingly
restored to its original rainforest state. Poet Edward Hirsch wrote
that Merwin “is one of the greatest poets of our age. He is a rare
spiritual presence in American life
and letters (the Thoreau of our era).”
His first collection of poetry, A Mask for Janus (1952), was
chosen by W.H. Auden for the Yale Younger Poets Prize. While that first
book reflected the formalism of
the period, Merwin eventually became known for an impersonal, indirect,
and open style that eschewed punctuation. Writing in the Guardian, Jay
Parini described
Merwin’s mature style as “his own kind of free verse, [where] he
layered image upon bright image, allowing the lines to hang in space,
largely without punctuation,
without rhymes ... with a kind of graceful urgency.” Although Merwin’s
writing has undergone stylistic changes through the course of his
career, a recurring theme is
man’s separation from nature. The poet saw the consequences of that
alienation as disastrous, both for the human race and for the rest of
the world.
Regarding his own development as a writer, Merwin once said, “I started
writing hymns for my father almost as soon as I could write at all,
illustrating them... But
the first real writers that held me were not poets: Conrad first, and
then Tolstoy, and it was not until I had received a scholarship and
gone away to the university that
I began to read poetry steadily and try incessantly, and with abiding
desperation, to write it.” Merwin attended Princeton University and
studied with R.P. Blackmur
and John Berryman. After graduating in 1948, he continued as a
post-graduate student of Romance languages and eventually traveled
through much of Europe,
translating poetry and working as a tutor, including for the son of
poet Robert Graves. Merwin’s early collections—especially A Mask for
Janus—reflect the influence
of Graves and the medieval poetry Merwin was translating at the time.
Indeed, the poetic forms of many eras and societies are the foundation
for a great deal of Merwin’s poetry. His first books contain many
pieces inspired by diverse,
classical models. According to Vernon Young in the American Poetry
Review, the poems are traceable to “Biblical tales, Classical myth,
love songs from the Age of
Chivalry, Renaissance retellings; they comprise carols, roundels, odes,
ballads, sestinas, and they contrive golden equivalents of emblematic
models: the masque, the
Zodiac, the Dance of Death.” In 1956, Merwin was offered a fellowship
from the Poets’ Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts and returned to the
U.S. His books
from this period, Green with Beasts (1956) and The Drunk in the Furnace
(1960), show the beginning of a shift in style and tone as Merwin began
to experiment with
irregular forms. The Drunk in the Furnace, which was written during
Merwin’s tenure in Boston when he was meeting poets such as Robert
Lowell, particularly shows
his new engagement with American themes. His obsession with the meaning
of America and its values can make Merwin sometimes seem like the great
nineteenthcentury poet Walt Whitman, critic Ed Folsom noted in
Shenandoah: “His poetry ... often implicitly and sometimes explicitly
responds to Whitman; his twentiethcentury sparsity and soberness—his
doubts about the value of America—answer, temper, Whitman’s
nineteenth-century expansiveness and exuberance—his
enthusiasm over the American creation.”
Merwin’s next books were some of his most critically acclaimed and
continue to be influential volumes. The Lice (1967), often read as a
response to the Vietnam War,
also condemns modern man in apocalyptic and visionary terms. “These are
poems not written to an agenda but that create an agenda,” wrote poet
and critic Reginald
Shepherd, “preserving and recreating the world in passionate words.
Merwin has always been concerned with the relationship between morality
and aesthetics,
weighing both terms equally. His poems speak back to the fallen world
not as tracts but as artistic events.” Dozens of poets pointed to The
Lice as a major influence
on their own writing, and the book remains one of Merwin’s most-read
volumes of poetry. His next book, The Carrier of Ladders (1970) won the
Pulitzer Prize for
poetry in 1971. He famously donated the prize money to the draft
resistance movement, writing an essay for the New York Review of Books
that outlined his
objections to the Vietnam War. His article spiked the ire of W.H.
Auden, who wrote a response arguing that the award was apolitical. The
Carrier of Ladders shows
Merwin continuing to engage with American themes and nature, and
includes a long sequence on American westward expansion. That same
year, Merwin published
The Miner’s Pale Children: A Book of Prose. Reviewing both volumes for
the New York Times, Helen Vendler noted that “these books invoke by
their subtitles the false
distinction between prose and poetry: the real distinction is between
prose and verse, since both are books of poems, with distinct
resemblances and a few
differences.”
Merwin moved to Hawaii to study Zen Buddhism in 1976. He eventually
settled in Maui and began to restore the forest surrounding his former
plantation. Both the
rigor of practicing Buddhism and the tropical landscape greatly
influenced Merwin’s later style. His next books increasingly show his
preoccupation with the natural
world. The Compass Flower (1977), Opening the Hand (1983), and The Rain
in the Trees (1988) “are concerned not only with what to renounce in
the metropolis but
also what to preserve in the country,” noted Ed Hirsch in the New York
Times. Many of the poems in the last volume “immerse themselves in
nature with a fresh
sense of numinousness,” said Hirsch, while also mourning the loss of
that nature to human greed and destruction. Merwin has continued to
produce striking poems
using nature as a backdrop. The Vixen (1996), for instance, is an
exploration of the rural forest in southwestern France that Merwin
called home for many years. Poetcritic J. D. McClatchy remarked in the
New Yorker that “the book is suffused with details of country
life—solitary walks and garden work, woodsmoke, birdsong,
lightfall.” But Merwin’s later poetry doesn’t merely describe the
natural world; it also records and condemns the destruction of nature,
from the felling of sacred
forests to the extinction of whole species. Migration: New and Selected
Poems (2005) exposes Merwin’s evolution as a stylist over half a
century but also shows, as Ben Lerner noted in his review of the volume for Jacket, that “Merwin ...
is an unwaveringly political poet ... [he] not only tracks the
literal impoverishment of our
planet, but he makes it symbolize the impoverishment of our culture’s
capacity for symbolization.” Migration was awarded the National Book
Award for poetry.
Some literary critics have identified Merwin with the group known as
the oracular poets, but Merwin himself once commented: “I have not
evolved an abstract
aesthetic theory and am not aware of belonging to any particular group
of writers.” Reviewing Migration for the New York Times, Dan Chiasson
described Merwin
poems as “secular prophecy grounded on perceptual fineness.” But while
Merwin’s work from the 1960s and early ‘70s perhaps best embody this
mode, Chiasson
believed that “its signature open form has been preserved whatever the
occasion. What began as stylistic necessity has become a mannerism.”
Merwin has continued
to win high praise for his poetry, however, including the 2009 Pulitzer
Prize for his collection The Shadow of Sirius (2008). The book’s three
sections deal with
childhood and memory, death and wisdom, and are some of the most
autobiographical of his career. The Pulitzer Prize committee cited the
book for its “luminous,
often-tender poems that focus on the profound power of memory.” Merwin
continues to add to his impressive body of work with recent collections
such as Garden
Time (2016) and The Moon Before Morning (2014). Reviewing The Essential
W.S. Merwin (2017) in the New Yorker, Dan Chiasson remarked, “Merwin’s
insistence on
a poetry of imaginative utility, against the encroachments of decades
of literary fads, has succeeded in giving his imagined worlds some of
the tangible pleasures and
horrors we associate with real ones. Like Stevens, whose old-age poems
are perhaps the greatest ever written, Merwin can say he ‘recomposed’
the constituents of his
vision. But he also planted and tended a palm forest that is now
permanently protected and open to the public. His poems, like that
forest, are a kind of time
preserve.”
In addition to writing poetry, prose and drama, Merwin is an
accomplished and prolific translator of poetry. Merwin has also
translated poets as diverse as Osip
Mandelstam and Pablo Neruda. His translation of Dante’s Purgatorio
(2000) and the Middle English epic Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
(2004) both won high
praise for their graceful, accessible language, and his Selected
Translations (2013) won the Harold Morton Landon Translation Award.
With Takako Lento he
translated the Collected Haiku of Yosa Buson (2013).
Merwin won most awards available to American poets, including the
Bollingen Prize, two Pulitzer Prizes, the Aiken Taylor Award for Modern
American Poetry, a
Ford Foundation grant, the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, the PEN Translation
Prize, the Shelley Memorial Award, the Wallace Stevens Award, the
Zbigniew Herbert
International Literary Award, a Lila Wallace-Reader’s Digest Writers’
Award, and the Harold Morton Landon Translation Award. He has also been
awarded
fellowships from The Academy of American Poets, the Guggenheim
Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Rockefeller
Foundation. Merwin is a
former chancellor of the Academy of American Poets and two-time U.S. poet laureate (1999-2000, 2010-2011).
Merwin was once asked what social role a poet plays—if any—in America.
He commented: “I think there’s a kind of desperate hope built into
poetry now that one
really wants, hopelessly, to save the world. One is trying to say
everything that can be said for the things that one loves while there’s
still time. I think that’s a social
role, don’t you? ... We keep expressing our anger and our love, and we
hope, hopelessly perhaps, that it will have some effect. But I
certainly have moved beyond the
despair, or the searing, dumb vision that I felt after writing The
Lice; one can’t live only in despair and anger without eventually
destroying the thing one is angry in
defense of. The world is still here, and there are aspects of human
life that are not purely destructive, and there is a need to pay
attention to the things around us
while they are still around us. And you know, in a way, if you don’t pay that attention, the anger is just bitterness.”
Merwin died in March 2019 at the age of 91.
MLA
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Citation of this Web Page
Reuben,
Paul P. "Chapter 10: W. S. Merwin." PAL: Perspectives in
American Literature- A Research and Reference Guide. URL: https://www.paulreuben.website/pal/chap10/merwin.html (provide page date
or date of your login).
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