PBS ran Ken Burns’s new four hour documentary
about Ernest Hemingway the last
two evenings. I have to admit that as
much as I admire Burns’s work, I
haven’t seen it yet. I have recorded it but will have to wait for chunks of time when my wife Kathy doesn’t want the TV set.
She would never sit down that long for an examination of figure who
she has never read but thinks of as
a misogynistic, macho creep.
And
that has been Hemingway’s problem. Once considered
the most important American novelist of
the 20th Century—and there was
plenty of competition for that honor—widely read and the recipient
of the Nobel Prize for Literature. He has fallen deeply out of favor in more
recent decades. That has been due as much as anything to his carefully constructed public image as a
rugged he-man adventurer, a lover of war and blood sports, a two-fisted drinker, and a man who carelessly used women.
His
forthright, Spartan, and straight
forward style once considered a revolutionary
liberation from ornate prose and
sentimentalism is now viewed by modern critics as too anchored in time and place, too bland, and worst of all lacking introspection. Feminists set him up to be an idol of patriarchy to be brought crashing
down.
There
is truth to all of that, of course. But
it also is not always supported by
either his life or work. Seen by modern conservatives as a model of masculinity and a lover of guns and glory, he was a life-long
leftist and often wracked by the depression and self-doubt
that lead him ultimately to swallow a
shotgun blast. He admired and loved strong women and his female
characters were well developed
and usually the moral superior to
the flawed men who loved them. For every drop if heroism in his male protagonists there was plenty of ambiguity and angst.
Hemingway,
no matter what we think of him, is so identified
as a novelist, short story writer, reporter,
and essayist that it may come as a shock that he also wrote poetry.
He wrote verse his entire life but most frequently in his younger
years spanning his Nick Adams in
the woods days, World War I, and jazz age
Paris. 88 of those poems were
included in Hemingway’s first privately printed book along with short
stories. Those poems were well served by
the same economy of style and clarity as his prose. They have stood up very well.
Along
With Youth
comes from those days when Hemingway was escaping the “broad lawns and narrow
minds” of his native Oak Park, Illinois by tramping around the woods
and streams of Michigan fishing, hunting,
and trapping.
Along With Youth
A porcupine skin,
Stiff with bad tanning,
It must have ended somewhere.
Stuffed horned owl
Pompous
Yellow eyed;
Chuck-wills-widow on a biassed twig
Sooted with dust.
Piles of old magazines,
Drawers of boy’s letters
And the line of love
They must have ended somewhere.
Yesterday’s Tribune is gone
Along with youth
And the canoe that went to pieces on the beach
The year of the big storm
When the hotel burned down
At Seney, Michigan.
—Ernest Hemingway
Hemingway in an Italian military hospital in his Red Cross ambulance corps uniform with Agnes von Kurowsky, the lovely nurse eight years his senior he fell madly in love with.
Champs
d’Honneur was written after the Great War where Hemmingway served as an
ambulance driver in Italy and was gravely wounded. Not much glorifying war here,
Champs d’Honneur
Soldiers never do die well;
Crosses
mark the places—
Wooden crosses where they fell,
Stuck
above their faces.
Soldiers pitch and cough and twitch—
All
the world roars red and black;
Soldiers smother in a ditch,
Choking
through the whole attack.
—Ernest Hemingway
“All Armies are the Same” is another bitter anti-war
verse.
“All Armies are the Same”
All armies are the same
Publicity is fame
Artillery makes the same old noise
Valor is an attribute of boys
Old soldiers all have tired eyes
All soldiers hear the same old lies
Dead bodies always have drawn flies
—Ernest Hemingway
The Age Demanded was written in post-war
Paris. The iron pants in the verse referred to the braces he had to wear on his legs in his long recovery from his war
wounds.
The Age Demanded
The age demanded that we sing
And cut away our tongue.
The age demanded that we flow
And hammered in the bung.
The age demanded that we dance
And jammed us into iron pants.
And in the end the age was handed
The sort of shit that it demanded.
—Ernest Hemingway
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