In the early 1990s Seamus Heaney began to contemplate how to deal with time passing and the death of family and friends. In a lecture, he contrasted Philip Larkins poem Aubade, in which death comes as something dark and absolute and life seems a trembling, fearful preparation for extinction, with Yeatss The Cold Heaven, which allowed a rich dialogue between the ideas of life as a cornucopia and life as an empty shell. Heaney saw poetry itself, no matter what its content or tone, standing against the dull thought of life as a great emptiness. When a poem rhymes, Heaney wrote, when a form generates itself, when a metre provokes consciousness into new postures, it is already on the side of life. When a rhyme surprises and extends the fixed relations between words, that in itself protests against necessity. When language does more than enough, as it does in all achieved poetry, it opts for the condition of overlife, and rebels at limit.
In his 1991 collection Seeing Things he included a poem, Fosterling, which seemed like a blueprint for how he himself might proceed, speaking of a heaviness of being producing poetry / Sluggish in the doldrums of what happens. And then writing of a change which had come: Me waiting until I was nearly fifty / To credit marvels. Like the tree-clock of tin cans / The tinkers made. So long for air to brighten, / Time to be dazzled and the heart to lighten.
The blueprint, however, has turned out not to open the way for an easy lightness, or a tone of bright hope, in Heaneys work, but for a struggle that his poems would enact and dramatise between the facts as Larkin presents them in Aubade and the idea, which Heaney proposes in his essay, that the vision of reality which poetry offers should be transformative, more than just a printout of the given circumstances of its time and place.
While his essay clearly comes down on one side, as does Fosterling, the poems themselves have been more hushed in the presence of mortality, more open to the idea of loss as something pure. His poems have offered consolation or transformation only because they contain tones and phrases that are perfectly tuned; they are true to memory and loss, and thus somehow, at times miraculously, they offer a vision of what is beyond them or above them.
In Human Chain, his best single volume for many years, and one that contains some of the best poems he has written, Heaney allows this struggle between the lacrimae rerum and the consolations of poetry to have a force which is satisfying because its result is so tentative and uncertain. Memory here can be filled with tones of regret and even undertones of anguish, but it also can appear with a sense of hard-won wonder. There is an active urge to capture the living breath of things, but he also allows sorrow into his poems.
He uses a poetic line which sometimes seems complete and whole in its rhythm, and at others is stopped short, held, left hanging. It is as though to allow the rhythm its full completion would be untrue to the shape of the experience that gave rise to the poem, untrue to the terms of the struggle between the pure possibility that language itself can offer and a knowledge of the sad fixtures which the grim business of loss can provide.
The verse structure Heaney seems most at home with here is the one most used in Seeing Things: it contains four stanzas of three lines per stanza, a sonnet without the couplet. This system offers a sort of looseness, a buoyancy, a refusal to close and conclude; it means that the endings of these poems can have a particular pathos, a holding of the breath, gleaning the unsaid off the palpable, as Heaney has it in his poem The Harvest Bow.
At times, despite his effort to be consoled, it is as though whatever is being remembered has taken all his heart for speech. This is most apparent in an elegy for the Irish singer David Hammond, which contains four of these three-line stanzas plus one extra line. It is the poem where the struggle between pure lament and the search for comfort in images seems most intense:
The door was open and the house was dark
Wherefore I called his name, although I knew
The answer this time would be silence
That kept me standing listening while it grew
Backwards and down and out into the street
Where as Id entered (I remember now)
The streetlamps too were out. |
If there is a presiding spirit haunting this book, it is Virgils Aeneid. In Stepping Stones, his book of interviews with Dennis ODriscoll, Heaney mentions that theres one Virgilian journey that has indeed been a constant presence, and that is Aeneass venture into the underworld. The motifs in Book VI have been in my head for years - the golden bough, Charons barge, the quest to meet the shade of the father.
Human Chain is a book of shades and memories, of things whispered, of journeys into the underworld, of elegies and translations, of echoes and silences. It conjures up the ghosts of three painters - Colin Middleton, Nancy Wynne-Jones, Derek Hill - who spent their lives working with Irish light and Irish weather. The three-part poem Chanson dAventure, describing a journey by ambulance after suffering a stroke, invokes with gentle reverence John Keats, who wrote in a late poem of This living hand, now warm and capable / of earnest grasping. Heaney describes:
my once capable
Warm hand, hand that I could not feel you lift
And lag in yours throughout that journey
When it lay flop-heavy as a bellpull |
The most ambitious poem in the book is an ingenious and moving encounter with Book VI of the Aeneid, with a description of finding a used copy of the book in Belfast and taking it on Route 110 across Northern Ireland (Cookstown via Toome and Magharafelt). Slowly the poem moves into the underworld (It was the age of ghosts), where it meets, among others, Louis ONeill, one of the murdered dead in the Troubles, who is the subject of Heaneys earlier poem Casualty and wanders in a world of shady memory to emerge in a final poem about the birth of a first grandchild.
Sometimes, it seems, it is enough for Heaney that he remembers. Throughout his career there have been poems of simple evocation and description. His refusal to sum up or offer meaning is part of his tact, but his skill at playing with rhythm, pushing phrases and images as hard as they will go, offers the poems an undertone, a gravity, a space between the words that allows them to soar or shiver.
There is one poem, Uncoupled - a diptych in memory of his parents - that has all the placid beauty of a Dutch painting or a Schubert song. Both parts of the poem are structured in the customary four three-line stanzas, both beginning with the same three words Who is this, both offering a single ghostly image from memory, something hovering between what is lost and what has now been found.
The first part describes his mother carrying a tray of ashes from the house to the ash-pit; it offers a picture of immense, distant dignity, allowing the ashes to be whitish dust and flakes still sparkling hot, purely themselves, but with all the resonance that they can command besides. The second part is a picture of his father not much higher than the cattle / Working his way towards me through the pen, / His ashplant in one hand. The father is thus captured in an ordinary moment, but he is Waving and calling something I cannot hear because of
all the lowing and roaring, lorries revving
At the far end of the yard, the dealers
Shouting among themselves |
but also, it is implied, because time has passed and death has intervened. In the last two lines - the last 20 words of the poem have each only one stark syllable - you watch Heaney struggling between the world of painful fact and something in his own imaginative spirit which insists that language used with sombre tact and care opts for the condition of overlife and rebels at limit:
So that his eyes leave mine and I know
The pain of loss before I know the term. |
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