MICHAEL
MANNING Engages
Jeremy Cantor’s
Poetry
Through an
introduction to Jeremy Cantor reading at Book
Passage, Corte Madera, California, August 1, 2015:
It
would probably not surprise many here were I to say that Jeremy Cantor is one
of my oldest friends, someone with whom I’ve shared interests and passions for
much of our co-lengthy lives, that my presence here is part and parcel of a
long stretch of mutual involvements in the usual and unusual matters comprised
in friendship. The one person I’m certain would be surprised by that assertion
is Jeremy Cantor, whom I physically met only six months ago. Our actual meeting
was on Facebook, and the first interaction I recall was in a mutual group
context wherein a conversation led somehow to one of the topics about which I
can’t shut up — an area of mathematics called transfinite theory (incidentally,
invented by a genius named “Cantor”, something that didn’t escape my notice).
Jeremy clearly knew something about it, and more than a few other things, and I
took note, realizing that this was someone I wanted to know. And so I sent the
perfunctory connection request which Jeremy prudently questioned then
faithfully accepted. Recalling this incident put me in mind of my favorite poem
by John Donne, “The Extasie”, Donne’s contemplation of the profundity of
ordinary matters in which he makes a beautiful observation about the complicity
of sense perception:
But
oh alas, so long, so far,
Our
bodies why do we forbear?
They'are
ours, though they'are not we; we are
The
intelligences, they the spheres.
We
owe them thanks, because they thus
Did
us, to us, at first convey
Donne
is commenting here on what a later Englishman would call “the doors of
perception,” conceding that without the senses little can advance even to incipience.
He goes on to say …
Yielded
their senses' force to us,
Nor
are dross to us, but allay.
…
thus suggesting that the metaphysical realm is privileged by the sensorial, and
that the metaphysical and physical, while perhaps distinguishable, are in fact
inseparable. My point in laying this out is to address Donne’s “But oh alas, so
long, so far, our bodies, why do we forbear.” … “…, because they thus did us,
to us, at first convey.”
It
was only then that I became aware of Jeremy’s poetry, which I found extremely
thoughtful, unusually tinged with science for poetry, and worldly, both like
and unlike Donne. Samuel Johnson, who’s credited with having invented the taxon
“Metaphysical Poet,” for which Donne is the poster-boy, was not atypically
scornful of the movement, saying “The metaphysical poets were men of learning,
and, to show their learning was their whole endeavour” (he went on to aim his
spear directly at Donne). In this respect, Jeremy’s quite unlike Donne, at
least as so wickedly caricatured by Johnson. His erudition is not worn, but is
subdued, enticingly veiled, and that
very subduction becomes an effective, almost signatory characteristic of his
poetry. Things emerge from Jeremy’s work, as I said in the foreword to his
present volume, “their meaning disguised in the plain dress of moment-to-moment
experience.” Jeremy’s mastered the stealth epiphany - the most facile metaphor
is that of a figure walking toward you in a mist, becoming gradually visible
and more lately discernible, finally, fully present. But I think an equivalent formulation
is that of a figure, unseen, that has been in the frame the entire time, around
which the context subtly shifts, and with it, our attention resolves....
...What
gets me is that it initiates in me its very sense of
discovery,
as though the poem is but its author’s metaphor for my experience.
I
want to continue for a bit with this theme of found meanings, and pivot to the
other great passion of my life, music. Much has been said about the musical
qualities of poetry and the poetic character of music, and we don’t need to
rehash those. But there’s a semantic connection they share - it’s been said of
music (and poetry) that it’s the art that is capable of telling you everything
without telling you something. Particularly in modern writing, the abandonment
of description in favor of evocation has brought it even closer to that ideal
in which metaphor is dissolved of all anchored references. That, of course, is
the starting position for a musical work, which, if anything, works most
unnaturally when it tries to simulate literary or pictorial imagery, literally
— think of the bleating sheep in Strauss’s Don Quixote and pity the woodwinds.
Unlike music, poetry isn’t restricted by wordlessness. Uniquely, it has the license
to draw from every other art’s toolkit. In Jeremy’s poem, “Changing Seasons,”
he exercises that license, writing:
Instead
of rattling my window pane
(the
way the one now letting herself out
by
the back door, quietly, had done) she chose
instead
to let a silver song announce
her
coming, by a barely stirring brush
of
scented hands against the old wind chimes
that
hung on the front porch.
It’s
a kind of controlled release of rhythm, image, timbre, color, place, objects,
even force, its silver song and scent-motivated chimes evoking actual
synesthesia. This idea that poetry, unbound, can be the universal art form is
due, in no small part, to a musician — John Cage, who was, after all, the
Charles Eliot Norton Professor of Poetry at Harvard University. Whatever else Cage
was, he was the most influential aesthetician of the latter 20th century and
the very embodiment of the formidable eclecticism he preached. Among the things
he famously said is that art is what we pay attention to. I thought of this
immediately when first I read Jeremy’s work, whose beauty is built of the
things that win attention in their own moments, where metaphor and anecdote,
the factual and the factitious are co-morbid elements of the work; where
structure and content cross-dress; where questions asked in one realm of
existence are answered in another. Cage liked to say that he explored the
mystical proposition that “all answers answer all questions.”
Last
week, I “interviewed” Jeremy in preparation for this — I wanted to get some idea
about his “process” — and what, in essence, he told me is that he really
doesn’t have a process. More often than not, he doesn’t know where his poetry
comes from, even to the point that it’s sometimes mysterious how exactly it
finds form on the page. I thought immediately, again, of Cage, who when
mentoring the young composer Morton Feldman asked him where his ideas came
from. Said Morton, “I don’t know.” Cage, in his unique affect, both
enthusiastic and ethereally detached, said “Isn’t that wonderful!? It’s so
beautiful and he doesn’t even know where it came from.” Ladies and gentlemen,
please welcome my friend, poet Jeremy Cantor.
*
TWO POEMS by
Jeremy Cantor
THE COGNOSCENTE
What my New York City cousin had
tacked to the wall above his bed
was
befitting of a New York City
cousin —
ads for Truffaut films, record
sleeves
from soundtracks of the same, a
line drawing
he pointed to, laughing and
saying to
my mother “This is a guy getting
a fix”
(to this day I don’t see the
humor in it
but since I was too young to
understand,
it’s possible that some critical
detail
has faded, leaving just a memory
that makes no sense) and photos
of Italian
actresses, mostly clothed except
for one, standing, eyes closed,
in calf-deep water,
her gracilis muscles tensed and
stretched
along her thighs like arrows
pointing to
the moment where they met, a
moment that
wouldn’t come for me until years
later,
the first time I was invited to
touch
something softer than a kitten’s
purr,
softer than the mink collar
on my mother’s coat.
THE SONGBIRDS
They leave familiar
footprints—three toes forward,
one toe facing back, the leg
constructed
so as to grip the perch without a
thought,
involuntarily, whenever the legs
are bent—
nor does a songbird have to worry
if
the branch he's perching on
should disappear
from under him without a moment's
warning.
He won't claw wildly for the
support
that suddenly betrays him—even as
he spreads his wings and
straightens out his legs,
his toes release the branch
without a thought.
I was mistaken when I chose this
twig,
this branch, this tree, this
forest full of songbirds
this place that I imagined I'd
call home
at last—it's not the place I
thought it was.
I try to grab the trunk and slow
my fall
while branches scrape my skin and
scratch my eyes
and opaque layered leaves obscure
my sight
but still I see the songbird,
unconcerned.
Everything he'll ever need to
know
when everything he counted on is
gone
is in his tendons and his hollow
bones.
His birthright is the art of
letting go --
mine is to have faith in what betrays.
mine is to have faith in what betrays.
*****
Michael Manning has enjoyed an
eclectic professional life encompassing academia, print and broadcast
journalism and management, scientific research, and software engineering in
addition to performing as the pianist with the Endicott Players. He has served on the faculties of Christopher
Newport University, Western Kentucky University and Northeastern University,
was Broadcast Director of public broadcasting’s flagship WGBH, Music Critic for
The Boston Globe, and Producer for
National Public Radio, and is presently a Peer Reviewer for Oxford University
Press. A graduate of Yale University’s
School of Music, he has performed and lectured throughout the United States,
and has been an established music critic on both coasts. His radio productions have earned the
industry’s highest awards, including Gold Medals from the New York
International Festivals and Columbia University’s Major Armstrong Award. Mr. Manning holds advanced degrees in Music,
Pure Mathematics and Applied Mathematics and has served in executive positions
at several prominent technology companies, including IBM and BAE Systems. He currently teaches undergraduate
mathematics.
Six poems from Jeremy Cantor’s debut collection, Wisteria from Seed (Kelsay Books, 2015), arranged for mezzo-soprano and accompaniment by Dr. Robert Gross, a composer of theater, film and television scores and of electroacoustic music, have been performed at the Boston Conservatory. Jeremy’s poems have appeared in ISLE (Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and the Environment, published in conjunction with Oxford University Press) and other journals. He was a semi-finalist in the competition for the Dartmouth Poet-in-Residence at the Frost Place, Robert Frost’s family home in Franconia, New Hampshire. Jeremy began writing after retiring from a career in laboratory chemistry. He has made and tested engine oil additives, detergents and pharmaceuticals, driven a forklift, worked in a full-body acid-proof hazmat suit, tried to keep his fingers working in a walk-in freezer at -40°F and worked behind radiation shielding. He prefers writing.
Six poems from Jeremy Cantor’s debut collection, Wisteria from Seed (Kelsay Books, 2015), arranged for mezzo-soprano and accompaniment by Dr. Robert Gross, a composer of theater, film and television scores and of electroacoustic music, have been performed at the Boston Conservatory. Jeremy’s poems have appeared in ISLE (Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and the Environment, published in conjunction with Oxford University Press) and other journals. He was a semi-finalist in the competition for the Dartmouth Poet-in-Residence at the Frost Place, Robert Frost’s family home in Franconia, New Hampshire. Jeremy began writing after retiring from a career in laboratory chemistry. He has made and tested engine oil additives, detergents and pharmaceuticals, driven a forklift, worked in a full-body acid-proof hazmat suit, tried to keep his fingers working in a walk-in freezer at -40°F and worked behind radiation shielding. He prefers writing.