Signs in harmony
ERIC ORMSBY
Christopher Middleton
COLLECTED POEMS 732pp. Carcanet. £25.
978 1 857549805
In the
"Introductory
Afterthoughts" to his collection of essays The Pursuit of the
Kingfisher
(1983), Christopher Middleton defines poetry as "a cross-coded music of
signs". When poets make large statements about the nature of poetry,
they
tend to be
describing
their own.
Middleton's definition is no exception; it captures something essential
about
the remarkable poems he has been writing for well over sixty years.
Though massive,
the present collection actually represents a winnowing of verse
published
between 1948 and last year, together with "work in progress" and a
small selection of translations (from Catullus, Rilke and Robert
Desnos) - the
work for which, somewhat unfairly, he is best known. Now, with his
Collected
Poems, his genuine distinction as an original poet in his own right can
be
seen.
Middleton
is sometimes
described as an "experimental" poet,' but that seems a misnomer.
True, he has written at least one "calligraphe" ("Birth of
Venus", a suggestive funnel of V's) and indulged in dadaistic "sound
poems", such as "Armadillo Cello Solo" (with the yodelling
refrain "didl dodl dadl"). In an interview with the poet Marius
Kociejowski, Middleton remarked that "the capacity to be surprised"
is fundamental to good poetry, and he is as likely to surprise us with
a
classical elegy in impeccable couplets as with "microzoic
nonsonnets." Indeed, the ballads, odes, rhyming quatrains, and other
traditional forms on display here (however cunningly camouflaged) quite
overwhelm the "experimental" verse. Still, it would probably be wrong
to force this most restless of poets into any narrow category. As with
the
question of his poetic "nationality", such considerations appear
beside the point. Born in Cornwall in
1926,
Middleton has lived and taught in Texas
since 1966 - though always (as if to vex categories definitively) as a
"resident
alien". His best poems draw their inspiration from foreign places: Austin and Abilene
are as
familiar to him as Paris and Vienna,
or the rocky hinterlands of Greece
and Anatolia. Unlike, say, Thom Gunn,
who
worked hard to accommodate his hard-won English style with a rougher
and more
free wheeling American manner, Middleton seems at home everywhere. He
makes
wherever he alights a native place. His landscapes, however exotic, are
always
intimate.
The
"music of
signs" is audible throughout. When Middleton describes the marble altar
of
a cathedral in Vaison-la-Romaine, he speaks of "sinuous ligatures
close-packed as wheat". These are not Baudelairean "correspondences"
- glints of transcendence in the world's facade - but signs which
disclose
their significance only in harmony with other signs. In Middleton's
work, it is
such "ligatures" - what he has called the "little unspectacular
conjunctions" - which create the music. This doesn't always work. The
otherwise enchanting "Prospecting in Sicily, April 1787", in the voice of
the young Goethe, is marred by the clogged music of its final line
("Ego-agonized recall gravity dragging its Wurzel down"); fortunately,
such discordant notes are rare.
The
"cross-coding"
too is much in evidence. Middleton's vistas tend to be encrypted with
hints, as
in the brilliant "Skaters in the Luxembourg Gardens, 1909", in which
an old photograph of a blowsy Parisian-skating party, seen eighty years
later
in Texas, captures a moment of lost insouciance - a "lull in a bubble"
- overshadowed only by awareness of the trench warfare soon to come.
But
foreboding alone doesn't account for the poem's power. The glass over
the print
e is "webbed with hairlines". The past it frames, that "secret
place" we might yearn to "tunnel back" to, as to some Eden of the
ordinary, has
changed in our hands, and now "the scratches hold their accidental
ground". This is what in another poem ("Still Small Voice")
Middleton "- calls "braiding the split fibres of time".
In
"Some Words about
Some Silence", he evokes the shadow of a buzzard over a city where
"people / Have lost interest in that sort of thing". The last stanza
runs:
I
should tell them how free
with silence it is,
When
such a shadow crosses
throngs of leaves
And
when the leaves, moving
to no measure,
Catch
at the shadow, though
too late,
Too
late, for look, a breath,
and it has gone.
In the
Collected Poems, birds
and other winged things occupy pride of place; birdsong itself forms a
recurrent
motif, serving as a natural counterpoint to the artifice of verse. (In
a
similar vein, Middleton points out in a note that the claw-marks of
turtles
"scuffled on wet sand" bear an unexpected resemblance to the
"flush and indented lines of Roman elegiacs", a genre at which he
excels.) In this stanza, the bird's shadow and the "throngs of
leaves" which catch at it pass each other by. It is the slightest of
signs, a vanishing semaphore. But one wouldn't have guessed that a
second of silence
could be so musical.