rivers and mountains

April 24, 2004


Artichokes, celeriac, leeks, onions -- a simple shopping list except there is not a single leek to be had in the produce aisles. For some reason, I wander the supermarket aisles musing on whether or not poetry matters instead of on which other market I might try for leeks. Normally I would say to myself, "Self, of course poetry matters!" and get on with shopping for produce. But this is really bugging me. Does poetry matter?

As I carry the artichokes, celeriac, and onions across the parking lot to the car, I find myself thinking about Tu Fu's Ballad of the Army Carts. I saw something on CNN about bringing back the draft. That could explain why I'm thinking about Ballad of the Army Carts (it's about conscripts going off to war -- in Tang dynasty times). Clearly poetry matters to me if my reaction to the disquieting memory of high school days when 18-year-olds couldn't vote and the boys were being drafted to fight in VietNam is to recite that poem to myself. Still, nobody wanders the produce department wondering whether artichokes matter.

It goes without saying that artichokes, celeriac, leeks, and onions matter. But you can't eat poetry. The debate about whether poetry matters goes back at least to the ancient Greeks -- would Plato have poets in the Republic? Were there societies where poetry mattered? In primitive cultures when people sat around the fire exchanging stories with rhythm and rhyme, did they think of it as poetry? Was it so central to their social cohesion that it never ocurred to them to ask the question? Is asking whether poetry matters somehow an issue of western civilization?

Nancy gave me a collection of haiku by Japanese women for my birthday. The poems are well chosen and cover a period from the 17th century heyday of haiku to the 20th century modern era. That got me thinking about the culture of haiku poets in 17the century Japan (Basho and friends) and wondering whether they were central to society or on the margins. Same for the Tang dynasty poets. They wrote to and about each other and about rivers and mountains and fleeing the bureaucracy, but did the bureaucracy care? Why exactly did disgraced or burned out bureaucrats end up in the countryside singing the praises of rivers and mountains?

These are not things I should be thinking about instead of where to get some leeks for supper or whether I should make something else that doesn't require leeks. This is just an extension of the weird reverie I went into on Thursday when I went to Avenue Victor Hugo after an afternoon meeting with my temporary employers in Cambridge. Just a quick trip across the river to check in on how AVH is doing in selling off its inventory at 50% off in preparation for closing after 29 years. Charla had emailed me that she wanted something from AVH to remember it by, as she has a chair from Gregor's in Seattle. A chair might be a bit much and they're not selling off the fixtures 'til May, so I asked the cashier about the don't stick your tongue out at the cat signs. They're not going to sell the original and she wasn't sure how many/if any copies there are. She told me to come back in May. Meanwhile, I picked up Eastward the Sea by Charles Haywood, which I had browsed at on my last trip in February -- hey, it's a major expedition to go to Newbury Street from the edge of the universe these days and besides that the only remaining reasons to go there are Trident and AVH -- as well as Life with the Ladies of Llangollen, selected for obvious reasons, and The Wild Edge by Philip Kopper, selected because it goes on for pages and pages about Ammophila brevigulata and has an index entry for Pilkey, Orrin. Since Nancy and I plan to go there again this weekend, weather and Furball permitting, I passed up the John Marquand novels in the New England fiction section so I could check my shelves for which ones I don't have. I mean I searched so long for Wickford Point that my brain could easily convince me that I don't have it since the memory of looking for it takes up more storage than the memory of Phil-person-of-Domino finding it for me and I wouldn't want to end up with two copies of Wickford Point when there are other readers out there waiting for the great John Marquand revival. My goodness what a long paragraph this is! All of this leads up to either the spectacular beauty of the magnolias in bloom among the brownstones on Commonwealth Ave or the impending demise of books as a medium for the continuity of civilization, despite the fact that the book is still the "killer app" for reading.

The gloom and doom over books, besides being a theme this journal has dealt with off and on since I read Sven Birkerts' The Gutenberg Elegies back in 1995 and disagreed with it (still do) is triggered by a jeremiad on the AVH website in which someone named John Usher blames everybody and everything except the Curse of the Bambino and Harry Frazee for AVH's closing after 29 years. So after I duly emailed Charla that artifacts from AVH would not be available 'til May, I settled in with my civilzation-destroying broadband Internet connection and set out to find out who this Usher guy is (he's not the proprietor of AVH). A search on "John Usher" "The Hound" (that's the name of the piece the jeremiad is from) and discovered that I have been missing a lot since I gave up reading online journals (and blogs) because of my war anxiety. Apparently the closing of AVH and the Usher diatribe have provided fodder for journallers and bloggers and pundits all across America since the closing was announced in March. And here I thought this was a local issue caused by the outrageous rents and general extreme gentrification of Newbury Street. Apparently it's a national issue and civilzation itself is in peril.

Librarians don't like being blamed. Editors who also blog are sad. The comments on this blogger's entry raise the obvious point that whoever this Usher guy is, he is clearly not from Boston as he fails to blame either the Big Dig or Grady Little. It made the April News and Cruel Site of the Day and over at Lorem Ipsum, as one door closes another one opens. And speaking of the Curse of the Bambino and the Big Dig, the Red Sox and Yankees are tied at 2 apiece as I write this and I've got to leave to pick up Nancy at South Station before we head back up off the edge of the universe to bid, bid, bid at the Furball auction tonight. With the current Big Dig diversion it's beastly hard to turn left on Lincoln Street off of Surface Road to get to the bus station's parking lot so I had better allow extra time and get my ass away from the civilzation-destroying Internet and into the belly of the civilzation-destroying Big Dig.

To be continued...

Today's Reading
Both by Douglas Crase

This Year's Reading
2004 Booklist

Today's Starting Pitcher
Bronson Arroyo


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Copyright © 2004, Janet I. Egan