#also please be so serious. loved wayne. who on earth expected him to stick around.
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logs back into the stranger things fandom and suddenly everyone hates stranger things what da hell
#if i see one more vickie hate comment i will go ballistic#yeah we're gonna be plagued by so many bad faith and no context takes from bts for the next two years aren't we............#you can be mad about argyle heaven knows i am but you cannot seriously be complaining about vickie joining the cast like we knew this#also saw someone bring up karens s4 poster and im just agog. its been two years since that babe. karen has always been important.#fifth fucking named character we meet and she has her own arc every single season what da hell#also please be so serious. loved wayne. who on earth expected him to stick around.#i wouldn't be surprised if he skipped town on account of his nephew being dead and likely facing the scorn of the town for their relation
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John Berryman in 1966, two years after the publication of â77 Dream Songs.â The Heartsick Hilarity of John Berrymanâs Letters is a book review by Anthony Lane (in The New Yorker) of The Selected Letters of John Berryman. The book is edited by Philip Coleman and Calista McRae and published by the Belknap Press, at Harvard. My acquaintance, the generous Philip Coleman, mailed me a copy of this book at the end of October.  Lane writes, â. . . anyone who delights in listening to Berryman, and who canât help wondering how the singer becomes the songs, will find much to treasure here, in these garrulous and pedantic pages. There is hardly a paragraph in which Berrymanâpoet, pedagogue, boozehound, and symphonic self-destroyerâmay not be heard straining toward the condition of music. âI have to make my pleasure out of sound,â he says. The book is full of noises, heartsick with hilarity, and they await their transmutation into verse.â Here is the book review:
The poet John Berryman was born in 1914, in McAlester, Oklahoma. He was educated at Columbia and then in England, where he studied at Cambridge, met W. H. Auden and Dylan Thomas, and lit a cigarette for W. B. Yeats. All three men left traces in Berrymanâs early work. In 1938, he returned to New York and embarked upon a spate of teaching posts in colleges across the land, beginning at Wayne State University and progressing to stints at Harvard, Princeton, Cincinnati, Berkeley, Brown, and other arenas in which he could feel unsettled. The history of his health, physical and mental, was no less fitful and spasmodic, and alcohol, which has a soft spot for poets, found him an easy mark. In a similar vein, his romantic life was lunging, irrepressible, and desperate, so much so that it squandered any lasting claim to romance. Thrice married, he fathered a son and two daughters. He died in 1972, by jumping from the Washington Avenue Bridge in Minneapolis. To the appalled gratification of posterity, his fall was witnessed by somebody named Art Hitman.
Berryman would have laughed at that. In an existence that was littered with loss, the one thing that never failed him, apart from his unwaning and wax-free ear for English verse, was his sense of humor. The first that I heard of Berryman was this:
Life, friends, is boring. We must not say so. After all, the sky flashes, the great sea yearns, we ourselves flash and yearn, and moreover my mother told me as a boy (repeatingly) âEver to confess youâre bored means you have no
Inner Resources.â I conclude now I have no inner resources, because I am heavy bored. Peoples bore me, literature bores me, especially great literature, Henry bores me, with his plights & gripes as bad as achilles,
who loves people and valiant art, which bores me. And the tranquil hills, & gin, look like a drag and somehow a dog has taken itself & its tail considerably away into mountains or sea or sky, leaving behind: me, wag.
âWagâ meaning a witty fellow, or âwagâ meaning that he is of no more use than the back end of a mutt? Who on earth is Henry? Also, whoeverâs talking, why does he address us as âfriends,â as if he were Mark Antony and we were a Roman mob, and why canât he even honor Achillesâthe hero of the Iliad, a foundation stone of âgreat literatureââwith a capital letter? You have to know such literature pretty well before you earn the right to claim that it tires you out. Few knew it better than Berryman, or shouldered the burdens of serious reading with a more remorseless joy. As he once said, âWhen it came to a choice between buying a book and a sandwich, as it often did, I always chose the book.â
âLife, friendsâ is the fourteenth of âThe Dream Songs,â the many-splendored enterprise that consumed Berrymanâs energies in the latter half of his career, and on which his reputation largely rests. His labors on the Songs began in 1955 and led to â77 Dream Songs,â which was published in 1964 and won him a Pulitzer Prize. In the course of the Songs, which he regarded as one long poem, he is represented, or unreliably impersonated, by a figure named Henry, who undergoes âthe whole humiliating Human roundâ on his behalf. As Berryman explained, âHenry both is and is not me, obviously. We touch at certain points.â In 1968, along came a further three hundred and eight Songs, under the title âHis Toy, His Dream, His Rest.â (A haunting phrase, which grabs the seven ages of man, as outlined in âAs You Like It,â and squeezes them down to three.) Two days after publication, he was asked, by the Harvard Advocate, about his profession. âBeing a poet is a funny kind of jazz. It doesnât get you anything,â he said. âItâs just something you do.â
There was plenty of all that jazz. Berryman forsook the distillations of Eliot for the profusion of Whitman; the Dream Songs, endlessly rocking and rolling, surge onward in waves. Lay them aside, and you still have the other volumes of Berrymanâs poems, including âThe Dispossessedâ (1948), âHomage to Mistress Bradstreetâ (1956), and âLove & Fameâ (1970). Bundled together, they fill nearly three hundred pages. If magnitude freaks you out, there are slimmer selectionsâone from the Library of America, edited by Kevin Young, the poetry editor of this magazine, and another, âThe Heart Is Strange,â compiled by Daniel Swift to toast the centenary, in 2014, of the poetâs birth. And donât forget the authoritative 1982 biography by John Haffenden, who also put together a posthumous collection, âHenryâs Fate and Other Poems,â in 1977, as well as âBerrymanâs Shakespeareâ (1999), a Falstaffian banquet of his scholarly work on the Bard. Some of Berrymanâs critical writings are clustered, invaluably, in âThe Freedom of the Poetâ (1976). In short, you need space on your shelves, plus a clear head, if you want to join the Berrymaniacs. Proceed with caution; we can be a cranky bunch.
Of late, Berrymanâs star has waned. Its glow was never steady in the first place, but it has dimmed appreciably, because of lines like these:
Arrive a time when all coons lose dere grip, but is he come? Leâs do a hoedown, gal.
âThe Dream Songsâ is a hubbub, and some of it is spoken in blackfaceâor, to be accurate, in what might be described as blackvoice. It deals in unembarrassed minstrelsy, complete with a caricature of verbal tics, all too pointedly transcribed: âNow there you exaggerate, Sah. We hafta die.â To say that Berryman was airing the prejudices of his era is hardly to exonerate him; in any case, he seems to be evoking, in purposeful anachronism, an all but vanished age of vaudeville. Kevin Young, who is Black, prefaces his choice of Berrymanâs poetry by arguing, âMuch of the force of The Dream Songs comes from its use of race and blackface to express a (white) self unraveling.â Some readers will share Youngâs generously inquiring attitude; others will veer away from Berryman and never go back.
For anyone willing to stick around, thereâs a new book on the block. âThe Selected Letters of John Berrymanâ weighs in at more than seven hundred pages. It is edited by Philip Coleman and Calista McRae, and published by the Belknap Press, at Harvardâa selfless undertaking, given that Berryman derides Harvard as âa haven for the boring and the foolish,â wherein âmy students display a form of illiterate urbanity which will soon become very depressing.â (Not that other colleges elude his gibes. Berkeley is summed up as âParadise, with anthrax.â) The earliest letter, dated September, 1925, is from the schoolboy Berryman to his parents, and ends, âI love you too much to talk about.â In a pleasing symmetry, the final letter printed here, from 1971, shows Berryman rejoicing in his own parenthood. He tells a friend, âWe had a baby, Sarah Rebecca, in Juneâa beauty.â
And what lies in between? More or less the polyphony that youâd expect, should you come pre-tuned into Berryman. âVigour & fatigue, confidence & despair, the elegant & the blunt, the bright & the dry.â Such is the medley, he says, that he finds in the poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins, and you can feel Berryman swooping with similar freedom from one tone to the next. âBooks Iâve got, copulation I need,â he writes from Cambridge, at the age of twenty-two, thus initiating a lifelong and dangerous refrain. When he reports, two years later, that âI was attacked by an excited loneliness which is still with me and which has so far produced fifteen poems,â is that a grouse or a boast? There are alarming valedictions: âNurse w. another shot. no more now,â or, âMaybe I better go get a bottle of whisky; maybe I better not.â There are letters to Ezra Pound, one of which, sent with âatlantean respect & affection,â announces, âWhat we want is a new form of the daring,â a very Poundian demand. And there are smart little swerves into the aphoristicââWriters should be heard and not seenâ; âAll modern writers are complicated before they are goodââor into courteous eighteenth-century brusquerie. Pastiche can be useful when you have a grudge to convey: âMy dear Sir: You are plainly either a fool or a scoundrel. It is kinder to think you a fool; and so I do.â Itâs a letter best taken with a pinch of snuff.
Berryman was a captious and self-heating complainer, slow to cool. Just as the first word of the Iliad means âWrath,â so the first word of the opening Dream Song is âHuffy.â Seldom can you predict the cause of his looming ire. A concert performance by the Stradivarius Quartet, in the fall of 1941, drives him away: âBeethovenâs op. 130 they took now to be a circus, now to be a sea-chantey, & I fled in the middle to escape their Cavatina.â The following year, an epic letter to his landlord, on Grove Street, in Boston, is almost entirely concerned with a refrigerator, which has âdeveloped a high-pitched scream.â Berryman was not an easy man to live with, or to love, and the likelihood that even household appliances found his company intolerable cannot be dismissed.
Yet the poet was scarcely unique in his vexations; we all have our fridges to bear. Something else, far below the hum of daily pique, resounds through this massive bookâa ground bass of doom and dejection. âYou may prepare my coffin.â âIf this reaches you, you will know I got as far as a letter-box at any rate.â âI write in haste, being back in Hell.â Such are the dirges to which Berryman treats his friends, in the winter of 1939â40, and the odd jauntiness in which he couches his misery somehow makes it worse. Itâs one thing to write, âI am fed up with pretending to be alive when in fact I am not,â but quite another to dispatch those words, as Berryman did, to someone whom you are courting; the recipient was Eileen Mulligan, whom he married nine months later, in October, 1942. To the critic Mark Van Doren, who had been his mentor at Columbia, he was more formal in his woe, declaring, âEach year I hope that next year will find me dead, and so far I have been disappointed, but I do not lose that hope, which is almost my only one.â We are close to the borders of Beckett.
There are definite jitters of comedy in so funereal a pose, and detractors of Berryman would say that he keeps trying on his desolation, like a man getting fitted for a dark suit. The trouble is that we know how he died. Even if he is putting on an act, for the horrified benefit of his correspondents, it is still a rehearsal for the main event, and you canât inspect the long lament that he sends to Eileen in 1953âafter they have separatedâwithout glancing ahead, almost twenty years, to the dĂŠnouement of his days. The letter leaps, like one of those 3 a.m. frettings which every insomniac will recognize, directly from money to death. âI only have $2.15 to live through the week,â the poet says, before laying out his plans. âMy insurance, the only sure way of paying my debts, expires on Thursday. So unless something happens I have to kill myself day after tomorrow evening or earlier.â To be specific, âWhat I am going to do is drop off the George Washington bridge. I believe one dies on the way down.â If Berryman is playing Cassandra to himself, crying out the details of his own quietus, how did the cry begin?
It is tempting to turn biography into cartographyâunrolling the record of somebodyâs life, smoothing it flat, and indicating the major fork in the road. Most of us rebut this thesis, as we amble maplessly along. In Berrymanâs case, however, there was a fork, so terrible and so palpable that no account of him, and no encounter with his poems, can afford to ignore it. The road didnât simply split in two; it was cratered, in the summer of 1926, when his father, John Allyn Smith, committed suicide.
The family was living in Clearwater, Florida, at the time, and young John was eleven years old. There was a bizarre prelude to the calamity, when his brother, Robert, was taken out by their father for a swim in the Gulf. What occurred next remains murky, but it seemed, for a while, as if they would not be returning to shore. One of the Dream Songs takes up the tale, mixing memory and denial:
Also I love him: me heâs done no wrong for going on forty yearsâforgiveness timeâ I touch now his despair, he felt as bad as Whitman on his tower but he did not swim out with me or my brother as he threatenedâ
a powerful swimmer, to âŻâŻâŻâŻâŻâŻâŻâŻtake one of us along as company in the defeat sublime, freezing my helpless mother: he only, very early in the morning, rose with his gun and went outdoors by my window and did what was needed.
I cannot read that wretched mind, so strong & so undone. Iâve always tried. IâIâm trying to forgive whose frantic passage, when he could not live an instant longer, in the summer dawn left Henry to live on.
Smithâs death would become the primal wound for his older son. Notice how the tough and Hemingway-tinged curtness of âdid what was neededâ gives way, all too soon, to the halting stammer of âIâIâm trying.â The wound was suppurating and unhealable, and there is little doubt that it deepened the festering of Berrymanâs life. As he writes in one of the final Dream Songs, âI spit upon this dreadful bankerâs grave / who shot his heart out in a Florida dawn / O ho alas alas.â Haffenden quotes these lines, raw with recrimination, in his biography; dryly informs us that the poet, in fact, never visited his fatherâs grave; and supplies us with relevant notes that Berryman made in 1970âtwo years before he, in turn, found a bridge and did what he thought was needed. He sounds like a patient striving mightily to become his own shrink:
Did I myself feel any guilt perhapsâlong-repressed if so & this is mere speculation (defense here) about Daddyâs death? (I certainly pickt up enough of Motherâs self-blame to accuse her once, drunk & raging, of having actually murdered him & staged a suicide.)
Alternatively:
So maybe my long self-pity has been based on an error, and there has been no (hero-) villain (Father) ruling my life, but only an unspeakably powerful possessive adoring mother, whose life at 75 is still centered wholly on me. And my (omnipotent) feeling that I can get away with anything.
For readers who ask themselves, browsing through âBerrymanâs Shakespeare,â why the poet bent his attention, again and again, to âHamlet,â to the plight of the prince, and to the preoccupationsâas Berryman boldly construed themâof the man who wrote the play, here is an answer of sorts. And, for anyone wanting more of this unholy psychodrama, consider the list of characters. Berrymanâs mother, born Martha Little, married John Allyn Smith. Less than eleven weeks after his death, she married her landlord, John Angus McAlpin Berryman, and thereafter called herself Jill, or Jill Angel. As for the poet, he was baptized with his fatherâs name, was known as Billy in infancy, and then, in deference to his brand-new stepfather, became John Berryman. This is like Hamlet having to call himself Claudius, Jr., on top of everything else. As Berryman remarks, âDamn Berrymans and their names.â
A book of back-and-forth correspondence with his mother was published in 1988, under the title âWe Dream of Honour.â (Having picked up the habit of British spelling, at Cambridge, Berryman never kicked it.) Inexcusably, itâs now out of print, but worth tracking down; and you could swear, as you leaf through it, that youâd stumbled upon a love affair. The son says to the mother, âI hope youâre well, darling, and less worried.â The mother tells the son, âI have loved you too much for wisdom, or it is perhaps nearer truth to say that with love or in anger, I am not wise.â We are offered a facsimile of a letter from 1953, in which Berryman begins, âMother, I have always failed; but I am not failing now.â
One obvious shortfall in the âSelected Lettersâ is that âWe Dream of Honourâ took the cream of the crop. Only eight letters here are addressed to Martha, six of them mailed from school, and, if youâre approaching Berryman as a novice, your take on him will be unavoidably skewed. By way of compensation, we get a wildly misconceived letter of advice from the middle-aged Berryman to his son, Paul, concluding with the maxim âStrong fathers crush sons.â Paul was four at the time. Haffenden has already cited that letter, however, and doubts whether it was ever sent. One item in the new book that I have never read before, and would prefer not to read again, is a letter from the fourteen-year-old Berryman to his stepfather, whom he calls Uncle Jack, and before whom he cringes as if whipped. âIâm a coward, a cheat, a bully, and a thief if I had the guts to steal,â the boy writes. Things get worse: âI have none of the fine qualities or emotions, and all the baser ones. I donât understand why God permitted me to be born.â He signs himself âJohn Berryman,â the sender mirroring the recipient, and adds, âP.S. Iâm a disgrace to your name.â
To read such words is to marvel that Berryman survived as long as he did. If one virtue emerged from the wreckage of his early years, it was a capacity to console; later, in the midst of his drinking and his lechery, he remained a reliable guide to grief, and to the blast area that surrounds it. In May, 1955, commiserating with Saul Bellow, whose father has just passed away, Berryman writes, âUnfortunately I am in a v g position to feel with you: my father died for me all over again last week.â He unfolds his larger theme: âHis fatherâs death is one of the few main things that happens to a man, I think, and it matters greatly to the life when it happens.â Bellowâs affliction, Berryman reassures him, lofts him into illustrious company: âShakespeare was probably in the middle of Hamlet and I think his effort increased.â Freud and Luther are then added to the roster of the fruitfully bereaved.
None of this will surprise an admirer of the Dream Songs. Among the loveliest are those in which the poet mourns departed friends, such as Robert Frost, Louis MacNeice, Theodore Roethke, and Delmore Schwartz. Berryman the comic, who can be scabrously funny, not least at his own expense, consorts with Berryman the frightener (âIn slack times visit I the violent dead / and pick their awful brainsâ) and Berryman the elegist, who can summon whole twilights of sorrow. In this, a tribute to Randall Jarrell, he gradually allows the verse to run on, like overflowing water, across the line breaks, with a grace denied to our harshly end-stopped lives:
In the night-reaches dreamed he of better graces, of liberations, and beloved faces, such as now ere dawn he sings. It would not be easy, accustomed to these things, to give up the old world, but he could try; let it all rest, have a good cry.
Let Randall rest, whom your self-torturing cannot restore one instantâs good to, rest: heâs left us now. The panic died and in the panicâs dying so did my old friend. I am headed west also, also, somehow.
In the chambers of the end weâll meet again I will say Randall, heâll say Pussycat and all will be as before when as we sought, among the beloved faces, eminence and were dissatisfied with that and needed more.
A photograph of 1941 shows Berryman in a dark coat, a hat, and a bow tie. His jaw is clean-shaven and firm. With his thin-rimmed spectacles and his ready smile, he looks like a spry young stockbroker on his way home from church. Skip ahead to the older Berryman, and you observe a very different beast, with a beard like the mane of a disenchanted lion. Finches could roost in it. The rims of his glasses are now thick and black, and his hands, in many images, refuse to be at rest. They gesticulate and splay, as if he were conducting an orchestra that he alone can hear. A cigarette serves as his baton.
If you seek to understand this metamorphosis, âThe Selected Letters of John Berrymanâ can help. What greets us here, as often as not, is a parody of a poet. Watch him fumble with the mechanisms of the everyday, âghoulishly inefficient about details and tickets and visas and trains and money and hotels.â Chores are as heavy as millstones, to his hypersensitive neck: âDo this, do that, phone these, phone those, repair this, drown that, poison the other.â We start to sniff a blendâpeculiar to Berryman, like a special tobaccoâof the humbled and the immodest. It drifts about, in aromatic puns: âmy work is growing by creeps & grounds.â Though the outer world of politics and civil strife may occasionally intrude, it proves no match for the smoke-filled rooms inside the poetâs head. When nuclear tests are carried out at Bikini Atoll, in 1954, they register only briefly, in a letter to Bellow. âThis thermonuclear business wd tip me up all over again if I were in shape to attend to it,â Berryman writes, before moving on to a harrowing digest of his diarrhea.
Above all, this is a book-riddled book. No one but Berryman, itâs fair to say, would write from a hospital in Minneapolis, having been admitted in a state of alcoholic and nervous prostration, to a bookstore in Oxford, asking, âCan you let me know what Elizabethan Bibles you have in stock?â The recklessness with which he abuses his body is paired with an indefatigable and nurselike care for textual minutiae. (âVery very tentatively I suggest that the comma might come out.â) Only on the page can he trust his powers of control, although even those desert him at a deliciously inappropriate moment. Writing to William Shawn at The New Yorker, in 1951, and proposing âa Profile on William Shakespeare,â Berryman begins, âDear Mr Shahn.â Of all the editors of all the magazines in all the world, he misspells him.
No such Profile appeared; nor, to oneâs infinite regret, did the edition of âKing Learâ on which Berryman toiled for years. What we do have is his fine essay of 1953, âShakespeare at Thirty,â which begins, âSuppose with me a time, a place, a man who was waked, risen, washed, dressed, fed, on a day in latter April long agoâabout April 22, say, of 1594, a Monday.â Few scholars would have the bravado, or the imaginative dexterity, for such supposings, and itâs a thrill to see a living poet treat a dead one not as a monument but as a partner in crime. âOh my god! Shakespeare. That multiform & encyclopedic bastard,â Berryman says in a letter of 1952, as if the two of them had just locked horns in a tavern.
Such plunges into the past, with its promise of adventure and refuge, came naturally to Berryman, nowhere more so than in âHomage to Mistress Bradstreet,â which was published in the Partisan Review in 1953 and, three years later, as a book. This was the poem with which he broke throughâdiscovering not just a receptive audience but a voice that, in its heightened lyrical pressure, sounded like his and nobody elseâs. The irony is that he did so by assuming the role of a woman: Anne Bradstreet, herself a poet, who emigrated from England to America, in 1630. It is her tough, pious, and hardscrabble history that Berryman chronicles: âFood endless, people few, all to be done. / As pippins roast, the question of the wolves / turns & turns.â In a celebrated scene, the heroine gives birth. Even if you dispute the male ability (or the right) to articulate such an experience, itâs hard not to be swayed by the fervor of dramatic effort:
I can can no longer and it passes the wretched trap whelming and I am me
drencht & powerful, I did it with my body! One proud tug greens Heaven. Marvellous, unforbidding Majesty. Swell, imperious bells. I fly.
What the poem cost its creator, over more than four years, is made plain in the letters, which ring with an exhausted ecstasy. âI feel like weeping all the time,â he tells one friend. âI regard every word in the poem as either a murderer or a lover.â As for Anne, who perished in 1672, âI certainly at some point fell in love with her.â Berryman adds, as if to prove his devotion, âI used three shirts at a time, in relays. I wish I were dead.â
Is this how we like poetry to be brought forth, even now? Though we may never touch the stuff, reading no verse from one year to the next, do we still expect it to be delivered in romantic agony, with attendant birth pangs? (So much for Wallace Stevens, who composed much of his work while gainfully employed, on a handsome salary, as an insurance executive.) Berryman viewed the notion of his being a confessional poet âwith rage and contempt,â and rightly so; the label is an insult to his craftsmanship. Nobody pining for mere self-expression, or craving a therapeutic blurt, could lavish on a paramour, as Berryman did, lines as elaborately wrought as these:
Loves are the summerâs. Summer like a bee Sucks out our best, thigh-brushes, and is gone.
You have to reach back to Donne to find so commanding an exercise in the clever-sensual. It comes from âBerrymanâs Sonnets,â a sequence of a hundred and fifteen poems, published in 1967. Most of them had been written long before, in 1947, in heat and haste, during an affair with a woman named Chris Haynes. And, in this huge new hoard of letters, how many are addressed to Haynes? Precisely one. Gossip hunters will slouch off in frustration, and good luck to them; on the other hand, anyone who delights in listening to Berryman, and who canât help wondering how the singer becomes the songs, will find much to treasure here, in these garrulous and pedantic pages. There is hardly a paragraph in which Berrymanâpoet, pedagogue, boozehound, and symphonic self-destroyerâmay not be heard straining toward the condition of music. âI have to make my pleasure out of sound,â he says. The book is full of noises, heartsick with hilarity, and they await their transmutation into verse.
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