I am a lifelong fan of Simic (who like Ernest Hemingway, graduated from Oak Park R0ver Forest High School, just blocks from my house), but as we both head into old age, I had low expectations (is that an age-ist comment?!) I’ve read in the past few years the later work of other poets such as Donald Hall and Mary Oliver, and the work is just generally not as good as early work. But still good, still worth reading, if you have gotten to know these folks over the years, old friends.
This book exceeded my expectations, hitting most of the touchstones I expect from him, such as his humor, his whimsy, his sometimes dark insights. Has it always been there, his awareness of looming death (he’s 82 as I write this)?, or is it more a function of old age? I think it’s always been there. Many poems openly discuss death: “Is Charles Simic afraid of death?/ Yes.”
Here’s one of the best poems in the collection:
Ghost Ship
Those blessed moments
That pretend
They’ll stay with us forever—
Soon gone,
Without a fare-the-well.
What’s the rush?
I heard myself say.
You have the right
To remain silent,
The night told me
As I sat in bed
Hatching plans
On how to hold the next
Captive in my head.
I recall a window thrown open
One summer day
On a grand view of the bay
And a cloud in all that blue
As pale as the horse
Death likes to ride
Always happy to shoot the breeze,
That lone cloud
Was telling me
As it drifted out to sea,
Toward some
Ship on the horizon,
That had already
Set sail
And was about to vanish
Out of sight,
On the way to some port
And country
Without name.
A ghost ship,
Most surely,
But mine all the same.
Always some surrealism:
You were a witness
To so many crimes
In your lifetime, my friend,
No wonder most nights
You can be found
Testifying at a trial
In some country
Whose language
You don’t even speak.
The proceedings
Brutally slow
With more and more corpses
Being brought in
Their ghastly wounds
As you saw them
With your own eyes
And in photographs.
You’ll be asked
To return tomorrow,
So once more
You’ll stagger out of bed
And grope your way
Toward the silent
Crowded courtroom
Already in session
Just down the hall.
Some whimsy weaves throughout:
Astronomy Lesson
The silent laughter
Of the stars
In the night sky
Tells us all
We need to know
Throughout run references to prayer and God: “One or two candles still burning/ In your terrifying absence/ Under the dark and majestic dome.”