.
[with 3 poems by Stephen Dunn]
.
Returning from an Artist’s Studio
.
Late at night in my one life
I see fireflies scintillating a field
and a fullish moon up there working
on its reputation, which I thought
was secure. And though I’m not one
to stop my car for beauty
I stop, get out, begin to understand
how the first stories winked
of another world. It’s as if
I’m witness to some quiet carnival
of the gods, or the unrisen dead
speaking in code.
.
Insects are eating each other. Stunned
beyond fear, mice are being given
their first and last flights,
talons holding them dear.
The fox has found a warren.
Everything I can’t see
is at least as real as what I can.
If I stand here long enough
I’ll hear a bark and a squeal.
.
The artist had an eye for exaggerated sunsets
splashed with rain, odd collisions
of roots, animals, seeds.
I didn’t like a thing I saw,
so much effort to be strange.
The moon is hanging from a leafy branch.
The fireflies are libidinous
and will not be denied.
.
Stephen Dunn
from Different Hours, W.W.Norton & Company, New York, NY. © 2000
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
Its birthday is three days from now: Monday, December 25. It will be two years old. Call it, perhaps, a mote which from where we stand is invisible. Or better, call it an eye, one that sees into almost everything. Best of all, in this season of visionaries who seek truth and meaning as they follow stars, call this a new-born star. There it glints, locked in thrall of its own near infinitely larger star, to which it turns its back and pays no attention at all.
.
The James Webb Space Telescope launched from Kourou, French Guiana, on December 25, 2021. Within a few weeks it maneuvered into its orbit around the Sun, 1.5 million km from Earth, and unfolded its mirror of bright hexagons, gold-plated beryllium, the ommatidia of its compound eye. It sees the light of galaxies emitted 13.1 billion years in the past (13.1 billion light-years distant). It is already shattering theories about the earliest times of our universe’s creation. Primordial black holes, early giant stars, galaxy clusters – is this inconceivable vastness really the Universe of which our own little planet is the center?
.
We choose December 25 to celebrate the birthday of a human being who represents God’s tangible presence here on earth. Immanuel, God-with-us. Jesus, in halo orbit around the Lagrange point of God’s gravitational unity – in the phraseology of Process Theology, “perfectly synchronized to God at all moments of life”; “fully and in every way responsive to God’s call.” This is how I yearn to experience my God – fully present in the wild aster seeds I gathered and sowed yesterday, and equally present throughout a universe spanning some 10*30 cubic light years. If the JWST reveals more wonders and marvels than I could ever dream, do I deny the nature of reality or shall I enlarge my notion of God?
.
Here’s my mission this Christmas season. First, to shift myself off center. As much as I’m able, to remember that the Universe does not really revolve around me; to open myself to the persuasive power of love pushing me to its Lagrange point. Second, to unfold my compound eye. To look out as far as it takes, and as deep within, to discover God in constant process of moving and becoming. And at the same time to discover what it is that I am called to become.
.
,
❦ ❦ ❦
.
Before the Sky Darkens
.
Sunsets, incipient storms, the tableaus
of melancholy – maybe these are
the Saturday night-events
to take your best girl to. At least then
there might be moments of vanishing beauty
before the sky darkens,
and the expectation of happiness
would hardly exist
and therefore might be possible.
.
More and more you learn to live
with the unacceptable.
You sense the ever-hidden God
retreating even farther,
terrified or embarrassed.
You might as well be a clown,
big silly clothes, no evidence of desire.
.
That’s how you feel, say, on a Tuesday.
Then out of the daily wreckage
comes an invitation
with your name on it. Or more likely,
that best girl of yours offers you,
once again, a small local kindness.
.
You open your windows to good air
blowing in from who knows where,
which you gulp and deeply inhale
as if you have a death sentence. You have.
All your life, it seems, you’ve been appealing it.
Night sweats and useless strategem. Reprieves.
.
Stephen Dunn
from Different Hours, W.W.Norton & Company, New York, NY. © 2000
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
So many bookcases. In this house are many mansions. A few days ago, on one of the less accessible shelves, I noticed a book I hadn’t opened in years. I couldn’t recall the specifics of the poems it contains but just looking at its cover recalled emotions from when I last read it: warmth, questioning, surprise, discovery, assurance that this process of living is valid, valuable, and even in its fearfulness to be cherished. Then I opened Stephen Dunn’s Different Hours and found this:
.
.
Twenty-three Christmases ago. I wonder how my parents selected this particular book for me? It had just been published but I don’t imagine it greeting folks boisterously as they entered the door at Barnes & Noble. Did Mom and Dad realize the book would win the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry? As well as I can recall, the only other book of poetry they every bought me was Maya Angelou. And then there’s the inscription, from “Dad and Mom,” although this is certainly my mother’s handwriting, still elegant and strong at the beginning of the century.
.
All these questions. In spite of them, I see that it was the perfect book for me then and that this is the perfect week to rediscover it. Stephen Dunn explores love, its foolishness and its bedrock. He explores death, of those people and things we love and our own racing toward us. And within the “different hours” of doubt and questioning, of emptiness and aimlessness, he hints at hope and wonder within this elusive reality we occupy.
.
After Christmas, as new books heap themselves on my desk, I’ll return this one to its safe berth. Whenever I next happen to chance upon it, I know it will again be the perfect time.
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
The Metaphysicians of South Jersey
.
Because in large cities the famous truths
already had been plumbed and debated,
the metaphysicians of South Jersey lowered
their gaze, just tried to be themselves.
They’d gather at coffee shops in Vineland
and deserted shacks deep in the Pine Barrens.
Nothing they came up with mattered
so they were free to be eclectic, and as odd
as getting to the heart of things demanded.
They walked undisguised on the boardwalk.
At the Hamilton Mall they blended
with the bargain-hunters and the feckless.
Almost everything amazed them,
the last hour of a county fair,
blueberry fields covered with mist.
They sought the approximate weight of sadness,
its measure and coloration. But they liked
a good ball game too, well pitched, lots of zeroes
on the scoreboard. At night when they lay down,
exhausted and enthralled, their spouses knew
it was too soon to ask any hard questions.
Come breakfast, as always, the metaphysicians
would begin to list the many small things
they’d observed and thought, unable to stop talking
about this place and what a world it was.
.
Stephen Dunn
from Different Hours, W.W.Norton & Company, New York, NY. © 2000
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
The James Webb Space Telescope is located near (in a “halo orbit” that keeps it in the vicinity of) the Sun-Earth L2 Lagrange Point. A Lagrange Point is an area of gravitational equilibrium in relationship to two massive bodies: Sun-Earth, Earth-Moon, etc. Positioning JWST in this way requires less energy to maintain and allows a longer functional lifespan.
.
More about the James Webb Space Telescope, and some literally awesome photographs, HERE
.
More about Process Theology, which states that each instant of Being is ever in the process of Becoming, HERE
.
Stephen Dunn (1939-2021) as described by The Poetry Foundation: Dunn’s poetry reflects the social, cultural, psychological, and philosophical territory of the American middle class; his intelligent, lyrical poems narrate the regular episodes of an everyman speaker’s growth, both as an individual and as part of a married—and later divorced—couple. His poetry is concerned with the anxieties, fears, joys, and problems of how to coexist in the world with all those who are part of our daily lives.
.
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
.
Love these Dunn poems (had not read his work before!) & story behind your revisiting the book. Happy holidays.
LikeLike
Thanks for visiting, Jeanne. Glad to share with you a bright morning as we pass the solstice. —B
LikeLike
Thank you, Bill, for reminding me of my love for Stephen Dunn—a poet I first learned of in the late 80’s when I read “On Hearing the Airlines Will Use a Psychological Profile to Catch Potential Skyjackers.” It seems it is now my perfect time to rediscover him. Wonderful writing on your part.
LikeLike
Thanks for the encouragement, Anne. I’m going to track down that poem . . . —B
LikeLike
Thank you, Bill, for the perfect words (both Stephen Dunn’s poems and your words) in the best order. Just what I needed to read today. Now I’m off for a deeper dive into Dunn’s poems and Process Theology. Wishing you, Linda and family a beautiful Christmas.
LikeLike
Thanks, Pat. You keep me going and thinking and writing. —B
LikeLike
Bill, as always, I love reading your blog today. I learned about a new poet, Stephen Dunn and the Lagrange Point, where the JWST is parked. A double hitter.
Always a pleasure reading your work.
Merry Christmas to you and Linda.
Ed Seel
LikeLike
Thanks so much for stopping by, Ed. I’m always glad to hear from you and I hope we’re going to cross paths in ’24!!! —B
LikeLike
Wow! absolutely exquisite thank you Bill
LikeLike
Thanks, Jenny. Happy Solstice and Merry Christmas to you. —B
LikeLiked by 1 person
I have been absolutely enthralled by the images from the James Webb telescope. It pushes my fascination and personal inquiry into new territory. Dunn’s poems are a great selection for those who are constantly searching. I have a poem about the JWST in my upcoming Main Street Rag chapbook.
LikeLike
Hey Les, good to hear — I’ll be looking for that Chapbook. —B
LikeLiked by 1 person
I fell in love with Stephen Dunn’s poetry while in a workshop he held at Salem College’s Writing Program. A serious man, a serious poet, and the three poems you selected reveal how seriously good the results his poets achieve.
LikeLike
Thank you, Bill!
LikeLike
What a stellar workshop that must have been. Thanks for visiting today and Merry Christmas to you! —B
LikeLike