How strange it is that here in mid
January I find myself in the southern tip of Africa on a warm summer afternoon
that would almost be too hot except for a gentle breeze that moves in from
where two oceans meet, yet never cross. I had been asked by a magazine editor
in Germany about a poem I may possibly know of, something by Robert Frost. Off
hand the theme that the poem was meant to express was not something I
recognised as being within Frost’s domain, but it did cause me to pull from my
book case a volume of his complete works, The
Poetry of Robert Frost, and scan through the long list of titles.
In less than a week’s time I will
be taking a flight from Cape Town to Boston, via Paris. When I land in Boston
Logan it will be winter, proper winter, cold with snow defied by heated homes
with fireplaces burning. Like Robert Frost, I was born and raised in New
England. I recall he lived in New Hampshire, the state that borders
Massachusetts to the north. The cluster of states known as New England, shares
not only a common climate but also a similar history, as they were the early
English colonies. Apart from the city of Boston, there are the well-known towns
of Arlington, Lexington, Concord and Braintree. There is Walden Pond, which is
surprisingly small, that provided Henry David Thoreau’s setting for his famous On Walden Pond
and also where he worked on his treatise Civil
Disobedience. Back then Thoreau was a young man and devoted to his
intellectual hero and self chosen teacher, Ralph Waldo Emerson. It seems only
natural that in my youth the generation I was part of identified with Thoreau,
while like him, I too looked up to the universal intellect of Emerson, whose
library included works from the great poet Goethe, that Emerson read in their
original German, to the Persian poet Hafiz.
While I have not been able to
locate the poem purported to be by Robert Frost that the magazine editor asked
about, I did start to read through several of Frost’s poems that I remember
reading when still at school. Frost became a cultural icon after the Second
World War, and every English class across America studied his poems.
Furthermore, he was specifically connected to rural New England, its woodlands
and small farms that so acutely expressed an intimate understanding of a stoic
yet unpretentious ethic. If Emerson was the foremost poet and thinker of the
early American Transcendentalists, who were born into the Unitarianism of New
England in the early decades of the nineteenth century, then Frost was a voice
of an outwardly more simple folk who possessed a depth of homely wisdom that
barely managed to survive the tumult of two world wars only to then dissipate
before the rise of an unmitigated hubris that took hold of the American psyche
and would land it in the Bay of Pigs, then Vietnam; both of which went terribly
wrong. There was the proto model of Indonesia, a massive victory for
unrestrained capitalism while plunging America into a moral quagmire as it
sequestered a whole region’s vast wealth of natural resources in the name of
halting the spread of Communism. Then on to Chile and El Salvador, for which
the writing of Joan Didion is essential to see the true face of a two faced
foreign policy, and so many other places around the world where the claim was
always the same: America was going to put things right. They would halt
Communism and the spreading of its evil empire. Later, with the Cold War over
it became the miasma of global terrorism that provided yet another carte
blanche to secure needed energy resources for a rapacious society with a most
heterodox anomaly: being somehow so incredibly naive and outrageously arrogant
at the same time.
Today, the claim of putting things right around the world seems less and
less palatable as its home situation has been exposed as far from exemplary.
The unmitigated avariciousness of its financial institutions has shocked a
people who had been lulled into consumerist complacency. The impotency of their political leaders in
the face of supra-banking fuelled by a debt-based economy has left a country
wondering who is actually running the show. But, as they say on Broadway: ‘The
show must go on’, so its proving hard for a country that has been so enamoured
by its own myth to face the bare facts of what is happening.
At least there is the build up to
the American presidential elections, which is always its own form of Roman
circus, so if nothing else it should provide some degree of distraction from an
otherwise tenuous at best, or otherwise immitigably perilous fiscal landscape.
Again you can see that efflorescent innocence of hope coupled with the largest
fucking military machine in the world. It has worked before, so it may work yet
again – or maybe not. For too long not only the general public but also
Congress and its sacred House of (elected) Representatives have been far too
willing not to ask how the country was kept safe and prosperous. Maybe better
not to know. But now it seems far less safe, and also nowhere near as prosperous.
Well, I am soon to be travelling to
America. It is there more than any place else in the world that I feel most a
stranger, upon the familiar soil from which I grew. It is late now, just past
midnight on a warm summer night in January, and I have arrived at a poem by
Robert Frost that most seems to take me back to the place where I come from:
Stopping By Woods On A Snowy
Evening
Whose woods these are I think I
know.
His house is in the village,
though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with
snow.
My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.
He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound’s the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.
The woods are lovely, dark, and
deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I
sleep.
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