Charles Simic Photograph by Isolde Ohlbaum |
Charles Simic in The New Yorker
The poet, who contributed to the magazine for half a century, wrote surreal, philosophical verse marked by a profound sense of joy.
By Hannah AizenmanJanuary 13, 2023
When I was a student in his workshop at N.Y.U., the poet Charles Simic would frequently counsel me and my classmates, “You could write a poem about anything!” (A toothpick, for example, or a rat on the subway tracks—he would perform a little impression, protruding his front teeth and waggling his fingers before his cheeks like whiskers.) Simic, who died this week, at the age of eighty-four, served as the United States Poet Laureate and won the Pulitzer Prize, among other national and international honors, and his advice is borne out in his body of work: a trove of surreal, philosophical verse, melancholy yet marked by a profound sense of humor and joie de vivre, in which the everyday mingles with the existential.
Simic contributed regularly to The New Yorker for half a century, starting in 1971, with “Sunflowers,” an oblique riff on the King Midas myth that reads simultaneously like a love poem and an ars poetica. Writing, after all, is an alchemical act—the poet’s touch transforming the stuff of life into art—and one that is often if not always intertwined with desire. The poem ends: “Sunflowers, / my greed is not for gold.” For what, then? Romance, experience, the world itself—or something more intangible, immense, whose mystery is realized and deepened through the language of the lyric? In their compression, Simic’s imagistic poems, whether looking inward, outward, or in many directions at once, convey a sense of vastness. “Harsh Climate,” from 1979, describes the brain as “Something like a stretch of tundra / On the scale of the universe.” But his work is also sensually abundant and imbued with earthly appetites, such as in “Country Lunch,” which begins, “A feast in the time of plague— / That’s the way it feels.”
Simic was born in Belgrade in 1938 and immigrated to the U.S. in 1954. He drew on memories of his war-torn youth for many poems, including “Empires”:
The juxtaposition of the domestic and historical realms is characteristic. Even poems that deal more explicitly with the nightmarish violence that Simic witnessed evoke that devastation through striking details and disconcerting metaphors. While his work avoids didacticism and stands in opposition to ideology, it evinces a practical righteousness. That humanity is embodied here in the figure of the grandmother, who admonishes the speaker not to tell anyone what she has said. “She then pulled my ear to make sure I understood,” Simic writes. This simple, intimate yet forceful gesture manages to convey the grave peril of their surroundings, but also contains a broader lesson for the child about power, demagoguery, and nationalism.
A contrast in scale creates an uncanny effect, too, in “Stub of a Red Pencil,” a metaphysical address to the titular object. “You were sharpened to a fine point / With a rusty razor blade,” Simic writes. “Then the unknown hand swept the shavings / Into its moist palm / And disappeared from view.” That hand recalls the hand of God, whose absence or apathy shapes “An inconceivable, varied world / Surrounding your severe presence / On every side, / Stub of a red pencil.” In Simic’s poetry, the universe’s indifference to mortal affairs is less a source of mourning than of marvel; in the dreamlike “Makers of Labyrinths,” he proposes a toast with “The wine of eternal ambiguities,” and muses, “Our misfortunes are builders. / They always forget about windows, / Make the ceilings low and heavy.” There is an acute awareness of suffering, and even a suggestion of complicity, in poems like “Reading History,” in which the speaker, studying atrocities of centuries past, compares himself to a judge condemning someone to execution:
Yet Simic also laughs at the tendency to see one’s reflection everywhere. From “Mirrors at 4 a.m.”:
Or, as he puts it in “Private Eye”—which, like many of Simic’s poems, bears the influence of film noir—“To find clues where there are none, / That’s my job now.”
A year after the September 11th attacks, The New Yorker dedicated a full page to “Late September,” an understated, haunting poem that both acknowledges the grief and terror of its moment and takes a long view. The speaker, hearing what he thinks is a television, “sure it was some new / Horror they were reporting,” goes to investigate, and finds “It was only the sea sounding weary / After so many lifetimes / Of pretending to be rushing off somewhere / And never getting anywhere.” In the wake of this nod to eternity, Simic returns to human time—“This morning, it felt like Sunday”—closing the poem by personifying “a dozen gray tombstones huddled close / As if they, too, had the shivers.”
Always a poet of memory, Simic continued, in his career’s later stages, to contemplate the past and to imagine the beyond. “To Dreams,” by the logic of the unconscious, disrupts chronology—“I’m still living at all the old addresses”—and, in a reversal of expectations, stages waking as a kind of death:
In “Driving Home,” the afterlife, rather than occupying an extraterrestrial plane, describes the conditions of reality:
“To Boredom” proclaims, “I’m the child of your rainy Sundays. / I watched time crawl / Over the ceiling / Like a wounded fly,” and goes on to assert, “I know Heaven’s like that. / In eternity’s classrooms, / The angels sit like bored children / With their heads bowed.” And, in “Preachers Warn,” “This peaceful world of ours is ready for destruction— / And still the sun shines, the sparrows come / Each morning to the bakery for crumbs.” In the latter poem, an arrangement of ordinary scenes celebrates life’s richness—and the final image, of a boy riding his bicycle “casually through the heavy traffic / His white shirttails fluttering behind him / Long after everyone else has come to a sudden stop,” bespeaks its ongoingness, even in the midst of death.
In 2014, the poet John Ashbery discussed Simic’s 2012 poem “The Lunatic” with former poetry editor Paul Muldoon on The New Yorker’s Poetry Podcast. Ashbery noted the “incredible lightness and at the same time toughness” of Simic’s voice. That poem, with its central image of a single snowflake “falling and falling / and picking itself up / off the ground, / to fall again,” is a wry vision of something like immortality, though eventually “night strolled over / to see what’s up.” “The Infinite,” which Simic himself read on the podcast, along with Sharon Olds’s elegy “Her Birthday as Ashes in Seawater,” in 2017, directly concretizes the eponymous abstraction. “The infinite yawns and keeps yawning. / Is it sleepy?” Simic asks. “Does it see us as a couple of fireflies / playing hide-and-seek in a graveyard? / Does it find us good to eat?” As to that closing question, Simic remarked, chuckling, “I think there is no debate about that—it’s hungry!”
In recent years, the magazine has published several short, often epigrammatic poems by Simic. “Left Out of the Bible” reads, in its entirety: “What Adam said to Eve / As they lay in the dark. / Honey, what’s making / That dog out there bark?” In as few as four lines, these works tell whole stories, courting wonder and strangeness in the most common of places and phrases and inviting the reader to encounter the familiar anew. Simic’s last appearance in The New Yorker was with a suite of six poems, printed in the June 13th, 2022, issue. Consider “For Rent”:
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