ONE COULD ORGANIZE a great course on American culture and literature around the books of Susan Howe, reading Mary Rowlandson in conjunction with Howe's Singularities, or Emily Dickinson in conjunction with My Emily Dickinson, and wrapping up with a field trip to the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in conjunction with this one, Debths.
The tricky part would getting the students to engage with Howe's writing, which makes few concessions to ordinary readerly expectations. Debths, for instance, contains "Tom Tit Tot," a fifty-some-page poem created by collaging photocopied bits of old books (some legible, some not) into spiky clumps of text.
The relatively more conventional poems would also discourage a reader unprepared to make an effort.
John Chipman Gray and the Rule Against Perpetuities
Something more ancient than what you remember or may not
remember moved me to lean on you. Because of all the dead.
I can't.
My cry is in the frost.
John Chipman Gray is the Gray of the law firm Ropes and Gray and also a much cited authority on property law. He wrote an influential book about the limits of perpetuities, that is, efforts to legally bind how the people of the future can dispose of property...which is in a way what Isabella Stewart Gardner tried to do in creating her museum with the stipulation that it had to remain exactly as she arranged it...but can one really do that? Does that make the dead more powerful than the living, to the point that life starts shutting down "because of all the dead" hedging us in with their demands that things not change? Does "my cry is in the frost" evoke one of Howe's illustrious predecessors as a poet of New England, someone who might not even recognize Howe's poetry as poetry but is nonetheless part of the tradition that enables her work?
Howe's poetry opens up if you, the reader, work at it. But you do have to work at it.
Howe is someone whose work I respect and admire more than I enjoy, but I do respect and admire it.
