Thursday, March 14, 2013

"When March Blows"

Ivor Gurney was extremely sensitive to changes in the world around him, be it the weather or the seasons.  Of course, one could argue that any "nature poet" (e.g., Edward Thomas, Andrew Young, John Clare, William Wordsworth) necessarily possesses such a sensitivity.  But in Gurney this sensitivity was particularly acute.

As I have noted before, I am reluctant to attribute Gurney's qualities as a poet to his sometimes precarious mental condition.  It would be unfair to him to suggest that his sensitivity was a product of that condition.  At the risk of sounding romantic, I think that Gurney can be likened to Vincent van Gogh:  the sensuous presence of the world -- everything in it -- was so deeply felt by both of them that they were constantly at risk of being overwhelmed (both physically and mentally).  It would be a disservice to them to describe their sensitivity as a pathology.  Perhaps we are the ones who need to catch up with them.

Enslin Du Plessis, "Cotswold Landscape" (1942)

                        When March Blows

When March blows, and Monday's linen is shown
On the goose berry bushes, and the worried washer alone
Fights at the soaked stuff, meres and the rutted pools
Mirror the wool-pack clouds, and shine clearer than jewels

And the children throw stones in them, spoil mirrors and clouds
The worry of washing over; the worry of foods,
Brings tea-time; March quietens as the trouble dies.
The washing is brought in under wind-swept clear skies.

Ivor Gurney, Selected Poems (edited by George Walter) (J. M. Dent 1996).

John Singer Sargent, "La Biancheria" (1910)

The subject of the washing drying in the wind brings to mind a lovely poem by Andrew Young.  The poem has appeared here before, but it is worth revisiting.

           The Shepherd's Hut

The smear of blue peat smoke
That staggered on the wind and broke,
The only sign of life,
Where was the shepherd's wife,
Who left those flapping clothes to dry,
Taking no thought for her family?
For, as they bellied out
And limbs took shape and waved about,
I thought, She little knows
That ghosts are trying on her children's clothes.

Andrew Young, Collected Poems (Rupert Hart-Davis 1960).

James McIntosh Patrick, "A City Garden" (1940)

2 comments:

  1. The image of freshly-washed clothes hanging on bushes or, more often when I was a boy, on a clothesline in the backyard (coming home from school I could see sheets and shirts and pants waving to me from a distance, a greeting that to this day I associate with the comfort of home) always conjures Richard Wilbur's "Love Calls Us to the Things of This World":

    The eyes open to a cry of pulleys,
    And spirited from sleep, the astounded
    soul
    Hangs for a moment bodiless and
    simple
    As false dawn.
    Outside the open window
    The morning air is all awash with
    angels.

    Some are in bed-sheets, some are
    in blouses,
    Some are in smocks: but truly there
    they are.
    Now they are rising together in calm
    swells
    Of halcyon feeling, filling whatever they
    wear
    With the deep joy of their impersonal
    breathing;

    Now they are flying in place,
    conveying
    The terrible speed of their
    omnipresence, moving
    And staying like white water; and now
    of a sudden
    They swoon down in so rapt a quiet
    That nobody seems to be there.
    The soul shrinks

    From all that it is about to remember,
    From the punctual rape of every
    blessed day,
    And cries,
    "Oh, let there be nothing on
    earth but laundry,
    Nothing but rosy hands in the rising
    steam
    And clear dances done in the sight of
    heaven."

    Yet, as the sun acknowledges
    With a warm look the world's hunks
    and colors,
    The soul descends once more in bitter
    love
    To accept the waking body, saying now
    In a changed voice as the man yawns
    and rises,

    "Bring them down from their ruddy
    gallows;
    Let there be clean linen for the backs
    of thieves;
    Let lovers go fresh and sweet to be
    undone,
    And the heaviest nuns walk in a pure
    floating
    Of dark habits,
    keeping their difficult
    balance."


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  2. Anonymous: thank you very much for the poem by Wilbur, which I hadn't seen before: it is lovely, and I appreciate your sharing it.

    And thank you as well for sharing your childhood memories of clotheslines in the backyard: I share similar memories, and you have brought them back to me. Perhaps clothes-dryers have taken something away. Although I'm sure my mother and grandmothers would think differently!

    Thanks again.

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