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A Singular Metamorphosis -- Howard Nemerov

Guest poem submitted by Paul E. Collins:
(Poem #1859) A Singular Metamorphosis
 We all were watching the quiz on television
 Last night, combining leisure with pleasure,
 When Uncle Harry's antique escritoire,
 Where he used to sit making up his accounts,
 Began to shudder and rock like a crying woman,
 Then burst into flower from every cubbyhole
 (For all the world like a seventy-four of the line
 Riding the swell and firing off Finisterre).

 Extraordinary sight! Its delicate legs
 Thickened and gnarled, writhing, they started to root
 The feet deep in a carpet of briony
 Star-pointed with primula. Small animals
 Began to mooch around and climb up this
 Reversionary desk and dustable heirloom
 Left in the gloomiest corner of the room
 Far from the television.

                                   I alone,
 To my belief, remarked the remarkable
 Transaction above remarked. The flowers were blue,
 The fiery blue of iris, and there was
 A smell of warm, wet grass and new horse-dung.

 The screen, meanwhile, communicated to us
 With some fidelity the image and voice
 Of Narcisse, the cultivated policewoman
 From San Francisco, who had already
 Taken the sponsors for ten thousand greens
 By knowing her Montalets from Capegues,
 Cordilleras from Gonorrheas, in
 The plays of Shapesmoke Swoon of Avalon,
 A tygers hart in a players painted hide
 If ever you saw one.

                              When all this was over,
 And everyone went home to bed, not one
 Mentioned the escritoire, which was by now
 Bowed over with a weight of fruit and nuts
 And birds and squirrels in its upper limbs.
 Stars tangled with its mistletoe and ivy.
-- Howard Nemerov
        (1920-1991)

Here's a fun American poem that deserves a little recognition.

The theme is agreeably whimsical: an old escritoire (or writing-desk)
spontaneously bursts into bloom and wildlife, and nobody notices because
they are watching the television. The language, for the most part, is
equally absurd. Small animals "mooch around", the escritoire is dubiously
likened to a battleship, and - in a delightful piece of verbosity - we are
told that only the narrator "remarked the remarkable transaction above
remarked". Of course, there are some compelling phrases, too: we can imagine
the legs of the escritoire becoming "thickened and gnarled, writhing" among
the "fiery blue of iris", and the vividness of that image mocks the scornful
"some fidelity" that is all the television can achieve.

Beneath the silliness we note a clear revulsion towards the stereotype of
Narcisse on the TV gameshow, who is amassing unearned dollars by
regurgitating factoids. Here is somebody who "[knows] her Montalets from
Capegues, Cordilleras from Gonorrheas" (garbled references to Shakespearean
characters); Shakespeare himself and his home town of Avon are likewise
churned into garbage. There is a nod to Greene's criticism of his
contemporary (whom he styled "an upstart crow ... with his tyger's heart
wrapt in a player's hide"), but here it seems to refer to the contestant,
aggressive and greedy under a veneer of sophistication, and by extension to
all the viewers who "[combine] leisure with pleasure" - a marketing
catchphrase for empty materialism.

What of the antique escritoire? It is a striking metaphor for manual,
thoughtful work ("where he used to sit making up his accounts") and so the
antithesis of passively watching television. Ignored for too long, the
wooden escritoire shrugs off its workmanship, reverts to its natural state,
that of a tree, and turns the "gloomiest corner of the room" into a blaze of
genuine beauty. This is the heart of Nemerov's message: that we too, by
letting ourselves sink into a swamp of style over content, risk losing our
roots.

Eq.

Poet Bio: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howard_Nemerov

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