
| ROBINSON JEFFERS: POET FOR THE NEW CENTURY Robert Brophy Poets enrich our world; without them we would suffer spiritual malnutrition. Some are celebrators of communal life--the Whitmans and Sandburgs who see the beauty of those who people the land, the vitality of the great cities, the diversity and immense promise of the melting-pot population; looking away from evil, they prefer to warm to the good, trumpeting what should be, what can be, what is some ways is. Other poets, less sanguine, more cautious, respond to a more tragic quality in their times. They sense decline, failure of the dream, corruption and perversity at society's core, perhaps even the essential narcissism of the race's self-preoccupation. Robinson Jeffers speaks to us from this latter group. Indeed he is first and foremost a celebrator, but not of mankind. He has "fallen in love outward," swept away by the beauty of the universe, which he sees as divine. This is one side of his poetics, a psalmist for his pantheistic god; the other side is critic of this time, a relentless voice, pronouncing doom to mankind's egocentric hopes, a prophet like Isaiah, demanding holiness and wholeness and renunciation of false gods. John Robinson Jeffers was born near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, January 10, 1887, of the talented, youthful Annie Robinson Tuttle and the fiftyish Presbyterian preacher-theologian, William Hamilton Jeffers. His temperament seems to have been molded in his early Years by two factors--his father's heavy-handed discipline and intermittent schooling in Europe. He later recalled: "When I was nine years, old my father began to slap Latin into me, literally with his hands; and when I was eleven he put me in a boarding school in Switzerland--a new one every year for four years--Vevey, Lausanne, Geneva, Zurich." The discipline and the suppression of normal boyhood social life produced, whatever the other predispositions, a personality which did not take easily to companionship, that sought the solitude and contemplation characteristic of his mature life. Yet there was to be a time for some social flowering. Occidental College, which he attended from 1903 to 1905, afforded him, for the first time, steady companionship. He became a frequent contributor to the school literary magazine and finally became its editor. He showed himself an indefatigable hiker, a font of erudition, poetic quotations, and linguistic expertise. Significantly his hiking made him a not infrequent visitor at the nearby Mt. Wilson Observatory, where Edwin Hubble was later to gain fame for discovering galaxies and establishing their flight from each other into ever-extended space. After graduation at age eighteen, June 1905, in a class of eleven, Jeffers enrolled as a literature student at the University of Southern California where he met his future wife, Una Call Kuster. Seven years of furtive meetings (for she was married) and painful separations finally brought them together in marriage in the August of 1913. Meanwhile during this postgraduate time he had quit the literary program to pursue almost three years at the USC medical school, then a semester in literature at the University of Zurich, and, finally, more course work, this time in forestry, and the University of Washington. His educational hegira seems truly eclectic and random, yet eventually it all comes together, as though carefully formulated. His European sojourns and immersion in language and literature enabled him to leap geographic barriers and move back and forth through centuries of culture. Latin, Greek, French, and German gave him a precise knowledge of words. His father's religious influence and the Calvinist catechism, assiduously absorbed, instilled an intense religious questioning, a sense of original sin, harsh self-mastery, and an expectation of God. The Bible gave him a rich fund of poetic of language, archetypal story, allusion and symbol. Science instilled a clinical imagination, an astronomic view of the world and time, a sense of apocalyptic violence imminent in all things, a recognition of correspondences, atom and electron, solar system and galaxy. Medicine impressed him with a romance-deflating outlook on human aspirations, a clinical assessment of glands and nerve fibrils. It also put him in touch with pain, death, and the corruption of the flesh. Classical literature opened to him the world of Greek theater, myth patterns, and ritual drama. Old English literature along with biblical verse yielded to him an alternative to the metered verse of his time. Philosophy introduced Heraclitus and Lucretius, with their sense of the primal ebb and flow of being; Nietzsche and Schopenhauer taught transvaluation of values and grim realism about the world. And the study of forestry made him privy to an intimate knowledge of flowers and trees which fill his poetry. This not to say that all or most of the above was encompassed in his formal education; he never ceased to enrich his mind and broaden his interests; academic preparation only set the directions. All this time the young Jeffers was writing poetry--second-rate poetry, full of romantic pangs and Byronian stances which found their way into print in the USC University Courier and then into a slim volume, Flagons and Apples (1912). Indeed Jeffers was self-assured enough in his talent that he was planning to take his wife to Lyme Regis on the southern coast of England, there to pursue a writing vocation, when the imminent cataclysm of World War I overruled him, and he turned, almost by chance, to Carmel, California. There he sensed immediately that he had come into his own. Jeffers freely identified the two greatest influences on his life and poetry as the Carmel landscape and his wife, Una. Una was truly a matrix of both his imaginative and personal life. She was part of him. Without her, his literary career, to say nothing of his social survival, is inconceivable. Una was the liberated woman of her day. She broke with its tight conventions to evoke divorce from her successful but neglectful husband. Having completed a masters degree in philosophy at USC, she had started further graduate work at UC Berkeley at the time of her marriage to Jeffers. During her life she kept her own distinct intellectual enthusiasms, became an expert lecturer on Irish music, architecture, and art, and was an avid reader and a book reviewer for a small California magazine. She was socially adroit and discriminating, a peer to literary and artistic greats who came to her home, ostensibly to meet her husband, only to be charmed , challenged, and cultivated by her lively mind and thorough acquaintance with the world of culture. She was beautiful, vocal, at times imperial; she solidified family friendship and kept a network of contacts through letter-writing. She ran a tight household on a small budget--twin sons to be clothed, fed, tutored, and cherished, an abstracted artist-husband to be nurtured , protected, scheduled, and loved. She was exuberant in her joy of life and in her fits of anger. She mediated and modulated life for the poet. The Carmel Big Sur landscape was both Jeffers's medium and his message. All of his poetry from 1914 quarried its seascape and crenelated canyons, isolated beaches, and foreboding headlands for symbol, theme, and story. The landscape taught Jeffers--the violent nature of beauty and the importunate epiphanies of God, the cycle of storm and serenity, solstice and equinox, erosion and burgeoning life. In a late poem he asserts: "My love, my loved subject: mountain and ocean, rock, water and beasts and trees / Are the protagonists; the human people are only symbolic interpreters." The landscape then is the message itself; he peoples his narrative because mankind is mostly deaf and blind to the non-human and needs his intervention. The landscape also provided another, more solid element for this quarryman--granite stones two-hundred weight from the shore beneath his knoll to create Tor House and Hawk Tower from 1919 onward-- the native earth-element domesticated to his use with careful ritual and ecological concern. Mornings he hammered out lines for his poems; afternoons he hauled, shunted, sided, and lifted, one by one, without companion or helper, year after year. The buildings were poems like his others, inhuman yet accommodated to human use. One piece in the mystery of his poetic consciousness is missing and its particulars probably will never be documented. Sometime close to his thirtieth year, Jeffers underwent an extraordinary deepening and self-integration, often described in terms of a religious conversion. Sometime during college or shortly thereafter, it is certain that the orthodox religious world of his father fell away. The transitional period, hedonistic, experimental, at times drunken, was freeing if painful. However, on his settling down with his wife in the primitive, soul-scouring landscape of Carmel came a peace and integration, which gave his poetry unusual strength and authenticity. He found himself possessed of a philosophy which he was later to label "Inhumanism," a consistent, thorough-going world-view based on his scientific insights, paced by astronomic perspectives, and inspirited by a mystic sense of immanent divinity. For him, the world became the ongoing self-discovery by God, who unfolds in the secrets of atoms and galaxies all the possibilities of being. Life in this primitive, divinity-charged world is change; spring to fall, summer to winter, these and all things else recapitulate the cycle. Death is inevitable and final; immortality is delusion. Pain is endemic and to be reconciled; pleasure and pursuit of security are deadening escapism. Mankind is a temporary phenomenon, a fragile, errant experiment of God, on a tiny dust-speck planet in the swirling sandstorm of a cosmos, which evolves and collapses in eighty-two billion year oscillations. Consciousness is a universal quality, but the human mind focuses it uniquely--either to praise God or grossly to distort the world in puerile self-aggrandizement. The cosmos is predetermined by all its vectors. Civilization and races rise and fall, emerge and disappear. Mankind's actions are fated but the individual can step out and contemplate the process. God is nothing like humans, is savage, indifferent, encompassing good and evil. He needs no help, brooks no interference. Saviorism is the bane of the best-intentioned; ultimately arrogant, it is doomed to frustration. Hold your hand up to the waves of the seashore; see how many of them you stop of an afternoon, Jeffers would seem to say. Virtue lies in detachment, indifference, stoicism--in turning outward and worshipping God. Wisdom lies in un-centering from mankind, seeing from this God's perspective. Peace is stoic balance compensating for innate biases toward immortality, invulnerability, stability, immunity from pain and sickness. Piety lies in reverence for the surrounding beauty, which is God's signature and presence. For thirty years Jeffers wrote poetry, almost a volume a year, Tamar to Hungerfield. In limelight or in shadow, he was content to "chronicle the human landscape of the Western Shore," as his friend James Rorty put it after a visit in 1924. His short lyrics are mini-sermons to a race out of "sync" with its world. They define beauty, mediate death, exalt natural phenomena, reconcile wars, focus human misery, champion simple life, glorify wilderness, scour the landscape of humans, harmonize beauty, pain, violence, and change. His longer poems, thirty or more, present parables for understanding the world and mankind's place in it. They confront natural depravity ("Tamar"), mystic vision ("Roan Stallion"), disengagement from lust and power ("The Tower Beyond Tragedy"), renunciation of security ("Cawdor"), warnings against megalomania ("The Women at Point Sur"), the trap of saviorism ("The Loving Shepherdess"), and many more themes. One his eight plays, "Medea," made a spectacular Broadway run in the 1940s with Dame Judith Anderson in the title role. One of a piece with his other poetic works, it probes the repercussions of human arrogance in a world in which nature retaliates. Jeffers's literary reputation skyrocketed in the 1920s, crested in the 30s, and plummeted in the 40s, especially with his polemical Double Axe volume (1948). After decades of neglect during which he appeared only sporadically in anthologies, his poetry is once again being appreciated by critic and reading public alike. There are those in the literary intelligentsia who think he will be one of the few great American poets of our century. Much of what he is being valued for now is what in his lifetime caused neglect and dismissal. As the century turns, he offers his cosmic vision to a world that, aided by NASA space probes and the Hubble and Keck telescopes, is finally awakening to the universe and has begun, in his phrase, to "turn outward." His "inhumanism" is no longer a synonym for misanthropy but a newfound and wonderfully apt word. Through it the ecologist goes beyond a progressive but still selfish sense of mere stewardship toward an awed realization that mankind is only one species among myriad others which have purposes of their own, not human-related, and are part, as Jeffers would say, "one organism." To a world where wilderness is fast being clear-cut, invaded by off-the-road vehicles, and is more stringently asphalt-ringed, his awe for total Otherness, as in his lyric"The Place for No Story," finds healing resonance. His incessant warnings of a population overwhelming the biosphere is no longer rantings. And his verse, stark, uncompromising, terse, incisive is eminently accessible and memorable. Jeffers seems, as it were, born out of his time. He may prove to be the prophet/seer/pathfinder for the twenty-first Century. |
© 2005 Jeffers Studies |