violence — and its antidote, compassion

November 30, 2004

there have been many halfway-decent reviews of gary snyder’s new book, danger on peaks, in various newspapers. i was excited when i saw that the seattle times finally gave it some ink, seattle being the root of many things like mountaineering and modern counter-culture. but, as i started to read, i thought it would be just kind of another generic review. i thought i’d have to keep looking for some good interviews with gary and all that. well, i was premature in my disappointment. the second half of the article has some nice stuff from a phone interview with gary and some good research.

In a phone interview last week from Las Vegas, where he had been lecturing and teaching, Snyder confessed that poetry came back into his life almost by accident.

“After I finished ‘Mountains and Rivers Without End,’” he said, in his deliberate and authoritative bass voice, “I had the feeling that it didn’t matter if I did any more poetry or not. I returned to writing just for fun. As I worked with a mix of prose and short poems, I recalled [Japanese haiku master] Basho.”

“Danger on Peaks” is written in a form called haibun, in which passages of prose crystallize into lyric poems. As Snyder was working on the new poems, a geologist invited him to explore the blast zone at Mount St. Helens, which reminded him of his adolescent experience there.

“That shaped the rest of my life,” he said. “It put me on guard against the modern world, against the direction of militaristic and industrial governments of all sorts and to the dangers to the environment.”

Snyder’s lyric poems often are composed of condensed, imagistic nuggets from nature: “paw track, lizard-slither, tumble of/a single bounder down” (from “Claws/Cause”). “Danger on Peaks” proceeds with a more supple line, often through urban areas as well as the back country.

From Hiroshima, it arcs through three more “blasts” — Mount St. Helens, 9/11 and the Taliban’s demolition of the gigantic Buddhas in Afghanistan’s Bamiyan Valley, offering a potent meditation on violence — and its antidote, compassion.

“The Bamiyan destruction prefigured what happened at the World Trade Center, which nobody has noticed,” declared the poet, linking, as always, culture to nature, the cooked to the raw, the image to the thing itself.

Snyder has lived since 1971 at Kitkitdizze, a pole-and-beam homestead with an open fireplace in the middle he built in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada. The new poems are peppered with the quotidian trivia of housekeeping, local politics, fatherhood (he is raising stepkids with his fourth wife), and being a famous poet.

In “What to Tell, Still,” he laments having to deal with a nefarious local lobbyist, rejoices in the clarity of a friend’s manuscript and glances with a sigh at another, “next in line for comment.”

Ever alert to shifts in the language, Snyder notes the freeway, I-5, which runs through California’s nearby Central Valley, is now called by locals “the five.” He contrasts the artificiality of its “gleaming bikes” and “huge BMW” with the “really the real world” of sandhill cranes in a flooded field.

“I’ve been labeled a beatnik, and I’ve been labeled a nature poet,” said Snyder. “But actually, I’m a Buddhist poet. And for Buddhists, all of reality is in its own terms natural. But the cranes are really the real world in the sense that ‘the five’ is impermanent on a different time scale. The cranes have been doing this migration [much longer], and it’s my fervent wish that they continue to be able to do it.”

###

i like the library

November 30, 2004

this quote by robert traver is well-known, but i just stumbled across it last night as i began a great compilation of his (traver on fishing, edited by nick lyons) i picked up at the library. the coolest thing about it might be that as i continued to read the collection, i stumbled across various phrases or ideas in other stories that were worked into this piece. he had obviously taken some small truths that he had discovered in his lifetime of fishing and writing and he distilled them into this really dynamite paragraph. without further ado:

Testament of a Fisherman

“I fish because I love to; because I love the environment where trout are found, which are invariably beautiful, and hate the environs where crowds of people are found, which are invariably ugly; because of all the television commercials, cocktail parties, and assorted social posturing I thus escape; because in a world where most men seem to spend their lives doing things they hate, my fishing is at once an endless source of delight and an act of small rebellion; because trout do not lie or cheat and cannot be bought or bribed or impressed by power, but respond only to quietude or humility and endless patience; because I suspect that men are going along this way for the last time, and I for one don’t want to waste the trip; because mercifully there are no telephones on trout waters; because only in the woods can I find solitude without loneliness; because bourbon out of an old tin cup always tastes better out there; because maybe one day I will catch a mermaid; and, finally, not because I regard fishing as being so terribly important but because I suspect that so many of the concerns of men are equally unimportant - and not nearly so much fun. ~ Robert Traver, aka John Voelker

wit and wisdom rarely go hand-in-hand… traver seems to have been the rare case where they coexisted very well.

###