Showing posts with label Razor's Edge (The). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Razor's Edge (The). Show all posts

Sunday, June 14, 2015

William Stafford: Where People Aren't


A book that I recently completed in my morning reading rotation is Things That Happen Where There Aren't Any People, a solid little William Stafford 38 page chapbook, put out by BOA Editions in 1980. 

Many of the poems in the book are about what the title suggests: things that happen without people. Stafford's deep interaction with nature comes out in any number of the poems included, such as the following:


Through the Junipers

   In the afternoon I wander away through
   the junipers. They scatter on low hills
   that open and close around me.
   If I go far enough, all sight or sound
   of people ends. I sit and look endless miles
   over waves of those hills.
   And then between sentences later when anyone
   asks me questions troubling to truth,
   my answers wander away and look back.
   There are these days, and there are these hills
   nobody thinks about, even in summer.
   And part of my life doesn’t have any home.


Stafford is the kind of poet who, on occasions such as this one, we seem to overhear talking to himself. He was a prolific poet, a serial writer if you will, and the more you read, the more you feel him working out the many different aspects of things he encounters. 

I could easily imagine him, on any given day, writing a very different last line for this poem. It is important to note, however, that this last line does not present empirical fact or even conjectural 'fact' - it presents feeling, how he felt after encountering nature without humans, and how he feels upon reentering the world of humans.

Reading this through some might think of Buddhism. Though this has some substance, I thought that Stafford, in his approach, represents a very Western (in this case, in both senses of the word) way of thinking, albeit a wilderness way of thinking. It reminded me of Somerset Maugham's character Larry Darrow from The Razor's Edge, who thinks that it is easy to be a monk on a mountain top, just try taking idealistic principles down into the world of people.

In case you forgot the post from 3 years ago (or weren't around these parts at that time), here's a scene with Bill Murray capturing the above sentiment from the excellent 1984 movie adaptation:




Because serendipity is the way of all things, I ran into the following haiku by Shiki in-between the next to last and last edit of this post and it seems, in its own way, to speak to the heart of the subject at hand:


      There is no trace
Of him who entered
      The summer grove
      Shiki
      trans. by R. W. Blyth


Photo by Tom Magliery

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baby sparrow--
even when people come
opening his mouth
Issa
trans. by David G. Lanoue



best,
Don

PS  Click to learn how to contribute to Wednesday Haiku

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Empty Glass: Issa's Sunday Service #133






Original promo video


Empty Glass
Why was I born today
Life is useless like Ecclesiastes say
I never had a chance
But opportunity's now in my hands

I stand with my guitar
All I need's a mirror
Then I'm a star
I'm so sick of dud TV
Next time you switch on
You might see me...oh.what a thrill for you

I've been there and gone there
I've lived there and bummed there
I've spinned there, I gave there
I drank there and I slaved there

I've had enough of the way things been done
Every man on a razors edge
Someone has used us to kill with the same gun
Killing each other by driving a wedge

My life's a mess I wait for you to pass
I stand here at the bar, I hold an empty glass


Why was I born today
Life is useless like Ecclesiastes say
I didn't get a chance
Opportunity's in my hand

I stand with my guitar
All I need's a mirror
Then I'm a star
I'm so sick of dud TV
Next time you switch on
You might see me...

I've been there and gone there
I've lived there and bummed there
I've spinned there, I gave there
I drank there and I slaved there

I've had enough of the way things have been done
Every man on a razor's edge
Someone has used us to shoot with the same gun
We where killing each other by driving a wedge

My life's a mess I wait for you to pass
I stand here at the bar, I hold an empty glass

Don't worry smile and dance
You just can work life out
Don't let down moods entrance you
Take the wine and shout

My life's a mess I wait for you to pass
I stand here at the bar, I hold an empty glass


Where to begin with this pure gem of rock, ambition, and spiritual questing?  Pete Townshend has always been at the forefront of the quest, as literary a rock writer as, say, Lou Reed, with a little wider focus and less pretense.  In "Empty Glass" there is a lot to chew over.

First, there is the Bible - the allusion to the always upbeat Ecclesiastes.  It's the Good News translation that specifically gives us "Life is useless" - many of the others, including the King James provides the more standard "Vanity of vanities, all is vanity."  In any case, point well taken.

Then, there is the slightly more subtle "every man on a razor's edge," an allusion to the Katha Upanishad, possibly by way of Somerset Maugham's popular novel, The Razor's Edge:

Get up! Wake up! Seek the guidance of an
Illumined teacher and realize the Self.
Sharp like a razor's edge is the path,
The sages say, difficult to traverse.
                       Katha Upanishad – 1.3.14

Townshend was at on time (and perhaps still is) a disciple of Meher Baba.  In many religions, including Christianity, the idea of making oneself an empty vessel to receive teaching/enlightenment is familiar.  Townshend also struggled with alcoholism and that is alluded to in the image.  The line "Take the wine and shout," however, might also be seen as part of the spiritual ecstatic approach, Omar Khayyam being a well-known proponent of this approach to living and dying.

The irony of "vanity of vanities" and "all I need's a mirror and I'm a star" certainly isn't lost on Townshend.  Watch how he preens and alters the timbre of his vocal while singing the lines in the video above.  It's a lot to jam into one simple pop song; come to think of it, it's not so simple after all, a real litrock classic





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useless me
useless weeds...
the cuckoo's opinion
Issa
translated by David G. Lanoue






best,
Don

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Go to the LitRock web site for a list of all 133 songs