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In the Valley of the Poets

August 26, 2019 by Paul Marion 1 Comment

Part I: The Historical Landscape. The Whittier Bridge connecting Amesbury and Newburyport. Kerouac Park in downtown Lowell. The Robert Frost Fountain on Campagnone Common in Lawrence. Across the Merrimack Valley, people walk, bike and drive past named places and structures that are only there because of the writers whose books are part of the American story.

Many of us know the Mount Rushmore-scale authors from our region who have gone from literary notables to historical figures. Former North Andover Poet Laureate Karen Kline promotes the area as the “Valley of the Poets.” There is a case to be made that our river valley is extraordinary, if not unique, among national locations with significant clusters of authors. 

Anne Bradstreet (1612-1672) is acknowledged as the first woman from the North American colonies to publish her poems and the first English-language American poet. Born Anne Dudley, Bradstreet and her husband, Simon, arrived in Massachusetts in 1630 and settled in what is now North Andover 16 years later, religious pioneers in the colony that was dominated by Puritans. Highly educated for an English woman of her time, the devoted spouse and mother of eight children was a committed writer whose poems were taken by her brother-in-law to London and published in the name of a “Gentlewoman from Those Parts” under the title “The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America.” She wrote about her life and relations at home from a spiritual perspective. While her gravesite is not known, she is remembered by a marker in North Andover’s Old North Parish Burying Ground. 

 

A chicken farmer in Derry, N.H., before people knew him for his poems, Robert Frost (1874-1963) wrote articles for farming magazines and taught school in the area like his mother did. A graduate of Lawrence High School, Frost touched down briefly in Methuen, Amesbury and Salem Depot, N.H. He had to take his family to England and publish a book of poems there to generate the first serious attention for his work. By the time he returned to New England after a few years he had established a name in the book world. Through the middle of the 20th century, Frost personified “poet” in the United States, winning four Pulitzer Prizes and reciting the inaugural poem for President John F. Kennedy in 1961. He remains one of the nation’s most identifiable poets. Some years ago, when visiting a school, I asked students to name a living American poet. “Robert Frost,” someone shouted. But he had died 25 years earlier. 

John Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892) retains the highest local visibility with two historical houses (Haverhill birthplace, Amesbury residence), an attractive blue bridge over the Merrimack River, a large mural portrait in downtown Amesbury, and a few buildings named in his memory. While not in vogue today, Whittier was a rock star in his time, selling so many copies of his long poem “Snow-Bound” about a family weathering a New England blizzard that he raked in $10,000 in royalties — about $158,000 in current dollars. 

In the 1950s, Jack Kerouac (1922-1969) became a one-name celebrity like Elvis after the publication of the novel “On the Road,” a highway tale about two guys searching for the meaning of life in a society with atom bombs. Kerouac gave the name to the Beat Generation, whose ideas about liberation, love, spirituality and the pursuit of happiness would flower in the mid-1960s. As for being classified as a poet, Kerouac said he was, but that he wrote in paragraphs most of the time. Truth is, he wrote a lot of poems and invented some original American poetic forms to counter the sonnets and villanelles of old: blues, pops, tics, choruses. 

In the next orbit outward, lesser known but substantially accomplished is Lucy Larcom (1824-1893), who moved from Beverly, Mass., to Lowell, where her mother ran a mill boarding house while young Lucy tended machines in a factory with other “mill girls” in the 1830s. Larcom wrote poems and the memoir “A New England Girlhood,” which was an early classic of the genre. She was active with writers at “The Lowell Offering” magazine, including Harriet Curtis and Harriet H. Robinson, both of whom were members of a women’s literary circle in Dracut in the 1840s.

Larcom ventured west to teach in Illinois before returning to Massachusetts, where she taught at Wheaton Female Seminary and worked as an editor of several publications. She was an ally of Whittier in the abolition movement and collaborated with him on publishing projects. Her poem “Weaving” expresses solidarity with enslaved black women harvesting cotton for shipment to Lowell’s profitable textile manufacturers. The unholy link between “the Lords of the Lash and Lords of the Loom” held fast until the Civil War ruptured the business partnerships.

Introduced to Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811-1896), President Abraham Lincoln reportedly said, “So you are the little woman who wrote the book that started this great war.” After the enormously popular and consequential “Uncle Tom’s Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly” was published in 1852, Stowe moved to Andover the same year with her husband, the religious scholar Calvin Snow of the Andover Theological Seminary. In the 19th century, the only book to outsell her anti-slavery novel was the Bible. While in Andover, she continued to write both prose and poems, though she is not as well known for the latter. Nancy Lusignan Schultz of Salem State University is working on an edition of Stowe’s collected poems.

The mid-20th century was John P. Marquand’s time in the literary sun. With roots in Newburyport’s high-yield seafaring era, Marquand (1893-1960) graduated from Newburyport High School at a time when his extended family had fallen in social rank. After Harvard College, where he wrote for the “Lampoon,” and a stint of magazine articles, he won a Pulitzer Prize for “The Late George Apley” in 1938, a novel and sly memoir that makes sophisticated fun of Boston’s upper class. His Mr. Moto espionage stories, the basis of films starring Peter Lorre, gained him a wide readership. An industrious writer, Marquand’s oeuvre includes 22 novels and collections of short stories. He’s buried at Sawyer Hill Burial Ground close to Maudslay State Park.

Two of the most admired prose writers since World War II called this region home.

John Updike (1932-2009) lived in Georgetown, bordering the valley, from 1976 to 1982 and spent most of his adult life in northeast Massachusetts. His hometowns figured in his books. For example, “Rabbit Is Rich” represents Georgetown, where he would be seen running like the novel’s lead, Harry “Rabbit” Angstrom. The author was a familiar face in the region, collecting an honorary degree from UMass Lowell in 1980 and giving a talk sponsored by the local Kerouac group, which is interesting, given that Updike parodied Kerouac’s “On the Road” as naive in an essay titled “On the Sidewalk” for The New Yorker at the height of the Beat author’s newsmaking.

For too long, the books of Andre Dubus II (1936-1999) books were like delicious meals served at a 30-seat restaurant that foodies with inside knowledge enjoyed for themselves. His reputation grew as publisher David R. Godine of Boston issued one collection of stories after another, the work drawing accolades from Updike and other reviewers. Dubus’ fortitude paid off as the “writers’ writer” crested the literary hill into “readers’ writer” altitude. His stories are being reissued in handsome volumes by Godine with introductions by Ann Beattie, Richard Russo and Tobias Wolff. 

In 1986, I wrote to Dubus to invite him to Lowell for a writers’ series I was organizing. He accepted gladly and read on April Fools’ Day in the national park auditorium, paired with Peggy Rambach, who read her own gritty local stories. My journal tells me he read his story “Townies” from the book “Finding a Girl in America,” and to this day my wife remembers the deep empathy in his reading of “The Fat Girl.” We adjourned to an Irish pub across the street, where we talked about trains, Raymond Carver, a triple murder in Hollywood and, of course, the Red Sox, with him reciting a suggested lineup for Opening Day. I wrote the next day: “He’s on the verge of breaking through to a huge audience, but for now he’s not out of reach and still among us.”

One of his sons, Andre III, who has risen to the top rank of writers (“House of Sand and Fog,” “Gone So Long”), appeared this spring at the Newburyport Literary Festival with author Peter Orner (“Am I Alone Here?,” “Esther Stories”), talking about the elder Dubus’ influence on other writers and themselves, as well as the place of his work in the American catalogue.

I have my worn yellow paperback of “Separate Flights” (1975) with blurbs on the back cover saying Dubus is the nation’s “most underrated writer” (Atlantic Monthly) and comparing him to Anton Chekhov (Los Angeles Times). How satisfying it is to see this author’s work flying gracefully through the wide blue sky of bookland today.   

Click here to read Part 2 of ‘Valley of the Poets’ – Paul Marion takes a look at today’s writers of note. >>>

Illustration by Jim Roldan.

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment Tagged With: author, Bradstreet, dubus, Frost, history, Kerouac, Larcom, literature, Marquand, merrimack, Poet, Poetry, Stowe, Updike, Whittier, writer

Stopping By Robert Frost’s Farm

June 5, 2016 by Lorraine Lordi Leave a Comment

A Landscape of Loneliness, Longing and Loveliness.

The Robert Frost Farm in Derry, N.H., isn’t much of a farm. Never was much of one when Frost lived here, either. It’s a simple, white New England clapboard house on a small plot of land that thousands of travelers pass by every day without a second thought.

Today, though, I give it a second thought. I stop.

It is still winter, a dark season doomed to bleakness and sighing. Winters would have moved in much the same way from 1901-1911, when Frost settled here. As northeast winds shook this humble wooden house, I imagine him drafting his poems at his kitchen table long after his wife, Elinor, and their four young ones had gone to bed.

“The terrain of my poetry is the Derry landscape, the Derry farm,” Frost once wrote.

This Terrain, where I’m standing, remains hallowed ground for poetry lovers. For here is where America’s most popular poet gathered ordinary, natural images that touched his soul: stone walls, icy brooks, birch trees, apple orchards, dead leaves, dense woods, snowflakes. And, sometimes, stars.

 

Even folks who don’t admit to liking poetry like Mr. Frost’s. The simple images make it easy to read, they say. Easy to understand. But standing out here between a sunset sky streaked with plum-orange and a brown ground still clinging to snow, I wonder: Was life really that simple for Frost? Or did he use this uncomplicated Derry landscape to mask life’s deeper dilemmas?

As a teacher of literature and one envious of those who create worlds of words surrounded by whiteness, I like to keep a poem with me. Today, I’ve tucked two of Frost’s in my jacket. I couldn’t decide which one I needed more: the one about starting or the one about stopping. So I brought both.

This first one, “The Road Not Taken,” speaks about making a tough choice when both paths in front of you are “really about the same.” In the poem, the narrator stands a long while before deciding to follow the “one less traveled by.” His maverick decision often inspires readers not to follow the crowd. But was the traveler’s decision the right one? Was it that simple?

I don’t think so. There’s this one little word in this poem that haunts me. The traveler in the poem reflects on his decision with a “sigh.” Is he sighing with relief or, perhaps, with regret? In the path of a lonely wind today I sense regret. In truth, the traveler can never know how life might have turned out had he taken the other path. He can’t know. Nor could Frost.

Like the traveler, Frost struggled with his career choices. Should he stay in Derry? Or should he move his family to England? Traveling overseas allowed his poetry to flourish. He became famous. In his old age, though, Frost confided, “We should have stayed farming when we knew we were well off.”

As the poem sighs, “Way leads on to way.” Once he became famous, Frost never farmed again.

Sometimes, though, you look at that long road ahead and wonder if you have it in you to keep going. At times, life isn’t all that you thought it would be. In the dark of winter, especially, you can’t picture your days getting better. In “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening,” that’s what I see — a man doubting the value of his life as he stops “to watch the woods fill up with snow.”

Most folks, however, see this popular Frost poem as a depiction of a quaint New England countryside: peaceful woods, a little horse and “downy flakes” of snow. That may be the picture on the canvas from afar, but step up close. Look deeper. You may see that Frost’s message isn’t so simple.

From the start, this poem raises a complex question: Why would someone venture out alone in a snowstorm on what is “the darkest evening of the year”? Silent, snowy woods may be lovely. But they are also, the poem starkly warns, “dark and deep.”

Poets, like saints, are bound to reveal truth no matter how uncomfortable it may be. About his close friend, the poet, Richard Cook once wrote, “He thought of the universe as a dark place with intermittent glints of light.”

Though one can’t confuse Frost with the character in this poem, Frost did, according to biographers, struggle with lifelong depression. In addition, he outlived his beloved wife and four of his children, and he agonized over his sister’s mental illness. And yet, despite wanting to stop, he picked up his pen and wrote for “miles and miles” before he slept.

The sun is setting. It’s time for me to leave these deep woods, gray rocks, bare trees, where I sense the complex inner landscape of Frost’s soul. My own, too. I bow and take my leave. The golden streaks of this fading sunset reveal the poet’s abiding truth when spring stays buried beneath the snow: We write our way through darkness on the beams of an inner light that guides us along the miles we have to go.

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, Community, Travel Tagged With: Derry, Farm, Frost, NH, Poetry

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