Chapter 8
THE WITNESS OF PEBBLES
Two years later, in 1981, the second of what would eventually be three
books of Roger White's poetry came out from the George Ronald publishers of
Oxford. This second volume contained nearly three times as many poems as the
first. Geoffrey Nash, who had finished his doctorate on Thomas Carlyle and had
just completed writing
Iran's Secret Pogrom, wrote the introduction. The
following year, in 1982, Nash was to go on and write the first significant
essay on the work of Roger White:
The Heroic Soul and the Ordinary
Self.[1]
The publication of this volume of poetry was timely. Robert Hayden, a Bahá'í
and an American poet laureate in the 1970s, had died the previous year. He had
been a Bahá'í and a poet for over forty years. In some important ways the
Bahá'í consciousness in world literature that this book is discussing found its
first significant poetic expression in the poetry of Robert Hayden. John
Hatcher points out that Hayden came of age as a poet in the early forties,
during the first teaching Plan, 1937-1944. A Bahá'í consciousness slowly grew
in his poetic expression beginning in 1943 when he joined the Bahá'í Faith,
although it did not become obvious, did not express significant Bahá'í themes,
until at least 1962 in Hayden's collection
A Ballad of Remembrance.[2]
White of course had begun writing poetry and a poetry clearly influenced by the
teachings of the Bahá'í Faith perhaps as early as the early 1950s. It is not
my purpose to examine the minutiae of who was the first poet to write poems
influenced by this new religion. Both poets were writing poems as early as the
1940s. I think I'd give the nod to Hayden as the first poet on the block by a
clear margin. But, it seems to me, this emergence of a Bahá'í consciousness is
more of a process and both these poets were involved in the process.
[3] This book focuses on White's part. White fully
achieved(if there was any doubt before), with this latest volume of poetry,
what literary critic A. Alvarez in 1962 said that poetry needed: 'a new
seriousness.' This he defined as: "the poet's ability and willingness to face
the full range of his experience with his full intelligence; not to take the
easy exits of either the conventional response or choking incoherence."
[4] Poets, Alvarez went on, needed to cope openly
with the quick of their experience. This was what he called 'a new depth
poetry.' White had already begun to find this depth by 1962 when Alvarez wrote
this and, by 1981 some two decades later, he had made out of his rich internal
resources and self-contained strength his own style and his own identity.
The Witness of Pebbles, as White called this new volume, was dedicated
"to all who witness in life and death."
[5] The
title 'pebbles' came from Bahá'u'lláh's writings where He refers to His
revelation enabling "every least pebble to resound with Thy praise."
[6] Whether one views this corpus of poems from a
literary or a non-literary standpoint, it is great poetry. T.S. Eliot once
argued that 'great poetry' had to be based on a great philosophy.
[7] "We can hardly doubt," he put it "that the truest
philosophy is the best material for the greatest poet."
[8] White, of course, derives his philosophy from the Bahá'í
Faith. His poetic inspiration, the poets who have clearly had an influence on
him, comes from George Herbert, Emily Dickinson and T.S. Eliot among others,
although White once wrote in an essay
[9] that he
felt the critical inspiration behind his poetry were holy souls who had passed
on to the next world and influenced his writing in quite inexplicable ways.
For years White had been his own Aristotle laying down the laws his poetry was
subject to. There is a deep and important relationship between philosophical
thought about poetry and poetry.
[10] These
essays about White's poetry shine a light on some of that subtle and
not-so-subtle relationship. It is a relationship that results, for this critic
anyway, in the diffusion of a tone and spirit of unity, a complex unity that
blends and fuses so much of that rag-and-bone-shop of life into a synthesis
through White's imaginative power. For the essence of the poetic process is
its "unifying and harmonizing activity."
[11]
One of the means White uses to get at truth is to examine the lives of
historical figures. Like Shakespeare, Euripides or one of a host of others,
White translates the great truths of his philosophy into a comprehensive
text-book on how to live. But like the literary outputs of all the great poets
and dramatists of history, White's text-book requires some work from his
readers. His is not a how-to manual, not systematic in its organization,
perhaps 'creative-resource-manual' might be a better comparison than text-book,
for there is little that is set out in a sequenced, ordered, way that covers
the material. It is impossible to read White's poetry without feeling that we
are being initiated into the company of a unique personality-a personality as
original and authentic as it is intellectually thought-provoking and a delight
to the mind, a personality who defined himself through his poetry, a work of
art that is produced by a special handling of language.
In the first section of this resource manual, containing some twenty-eight
poems, White does what Wordsworth did at the dawn of this modern age: he gives
the spirit of the past a restoration, a transformation. White is that poet of
memory and one can learn a great deal about Bahá'í history and its philosophy
by examining some of the poems here. Some of that history is recent; for
example, the passing of Hand of the Cause A.Q. Faizi in 1980. White gives us a
sonnet in rhyming couplets. But it's not the form that impresses so much as
the content. Here is one of many examples of spiritual history being rendered,
as the poet Roethke said it should be rendered, by dramatic poetry.
[12] White brings to the poem a sharp sense of
who and what Faizi was. This sharp sense of another person brings to White,
paradoxically, a heightened awareness of his own self and the self of others.
[13] It also allows him to make those "intuitive
leaps" which Roethke says "are one of the ways man.....approaches the divine-in
this comprehensive act, the really good poem."
[14] I'd like to take you through the poem
In Memoriam:
A.Q. Faizi[15] commenting
occasionally to make a point:
The children by the upturned sod
strew flowers, weeping. Only God
Who holds the slightest winged thing dear
knows all the sweetness folded here.
And so it was for those who knew Hand of the Cause Faizi: sweetness was the
operative word. This was no intuitive leap. But in the second half of the
octave White writes:
Were such love possible? ask we
who dole it with economy,
squander doubt and hoard affection
in private vaults beyond detection.
After warming us up in the first four lines with sentiments of tender-loving
care, White brings us down-to-earth, not so much with an intuitive leap, but
with an honest statement, pithy and poignant, of human inadequacy.
He continues, back to Faizi's funeral ceremony:
On Carmel trails the sun's gilt sleeve
as we chilled mourners slowly leave
And then comes the intuitive leap:
to seize the thought this death installs:
who'd serve the King must love His thralls.
Of course the idea is not entirely intuitive, but this last couplet is clearly,
for me anyway, the climax of the poem. For me there is surprise, truth, wisdom,
an idea that is unfamiliar that White makes familiar.
There is a loveliness in White's craft. Sometimes a simplistic, idealistic,
coherent view of a person can turn out to be too brittle for the complex facts
of a life--and the biographer must shift grounds. That is not the case here.
There is in White's work a sensitivity to "the sophisticated complexity of
life"
[16] that the great post-WWII American
poet Robert Lowell said was critical to any successful poetry. But however
complex the idea, there is a simplicity too. It is not a simplicity that orders
experience, rather, it is a simplicity that, in the words of Theodore Roethke,
attends "an experience with the conviction that there is order in it." White is
simply giving voice to a truth inherent in the death of the beloved Hand of the
Cause, namely, that he must be loved--and why. White is also giving us a poem
that "is so organized that the interplay between the elements sets up a complex
of meaning in which" White "wins through to his final utterance."
[17]
Again, the analysis could continue, but this is the reader's task.
"Criticism is the endeavour" wrote Saintsbury back in 1911, "to find, to know,
to love and to recommend the best that is known and written in the world,"
[18] but not to explain every detail. Poetry is
most fully realized when a reader's mind subjects that poetry to their own
serious and systematic contemplation. In the process the poetry is raised up
to "its highest possibility," writes Richard Kuhns.
[19] I will deal now with another poem which, though rooted
in a literal historical personality, recreates it. Solemnity is coated with the
colloquial, with the idiom of the everyday, its simple cliches and a sense of
immediacy. I am talking here of the first poem in the book
The True
Brother, although I could have chosen many others. Shoghi Effendi is
brought into the here and now. The reader engages with a Central Figure of his
Faith in a unique, a fresh, a human, a probing way. An inner landscape is seen
with a quiet eye
The poem opens:
You........
Across the Twin resplendent seas
which cast this pearl
we ask what praise
is adequate to you?
A simple question is conjoined with what, to Bahá'ís, is some familiar
nomenclature:
Twin resplendent seas. So the poem begins in its
unassuming way. It continues:
You.......
who knew far more than we
how little was the little
that we knew.
After nearly twenty years these lines have become a type of bottom-line, a
fundamental starting position in my relation to and understanding of, Shoghi
Effendi. And yet the words are so simple, so easy, so profoundly basic. The
poem ends with the following two stanzas:
You......
how belatedly we see
that you were more than brother,
more than true.
You........
through a mercy
we've not earned O! comfort us
who did not comfort
you.......
Such pure symmetry. If there is such a thing as a perfect poem, this one is
mine. How does one define a perfect poem? Which one will be yours? I had had a
love for Shoghi Effendi for perhaps twenty-five years when I read this poem in
1983 but White gave me words, expressed a feeling, that had been inside me.
This is one of the reasons for his great popularity. I find White a superbly
rational poet. It is a rationality that arises from, in the words of Susanne
Langer, "an elaboration of feeling."
[20]
Perhaps, too, what White does here and in so many of his poems is to take the
imprecise, the vague and undefined, unexpressed feelings and thoughts of life
that we encounter again and again and give them form, precision, definition.
And some readers find it thrilling, beautiful.
The remaining six sections of this book of poetry are all shorter than the
opening one called 'The Witness of Pebbles.' I will not attempt to examine all
the directions and thrusts these poems take in each section. Rather I will
make some selections of poems I particularly enjoyed and comment on them as a
way of introducing this book of White's poetry. The second section is called
'Songs and Sonnets' and contains twenty-two poems. White's poem
Coral and
Pearls was written for Hilda and Morrie Phillips
[21] and the title comes from the words of a marriage prayer
by 'Abdu'l-Bahá. It is written in the form of a sonnet, one of the many
sonnets in this section.
I find the poem is much like another of White's poems on marriage
Mark's
Madrigal which we will discuss later in this essay only there is not that
humorous undercurrent here. This poem is serious all the way. "The only chance
of doing some arresting writing, something that the world is waiting for with
open arms," writes Marilyn Kallet," is to be ready."
[22] In the late 1970s and early 1980s, White was ready.
There was a world of underlying meaning waiting to be recovered like metal out
of ore. That world could be found in Bahá'í history, in relationships, in
day-to-day life, all over the mountains and hills of existence. This poem is
an engagment with the institution of marriage. Again, many of the lines in the
poem require time, thought and the engagement of the reader. This is no quick
stroll through an in-depth magazine article on marriage in the weekend
supplement. Like so much of White's poetry, be prepared for contemplation, for
pondering. He takes you into your inner life by way of the thinking process.
His poetry engages you in a process that some have called the raid on the
inarticulate. It is a process of persuasion, of ambush, of dogged hunting and
sometimes of surrender but, however you describe it, this thinking process must
be set in motion or your minds will lie, as English poet Ted Hughes once wrote,
"like fish in the pond of a man who cannot fish."
[23]
But to return to
Mark's Madrigal. I won't go through every line in the
poem; I'll leave that to you with your own copy of
The Witness of
Pebbles. But I'll examine several of the provocative and somewhat demanding
lines:
...................................It is your unmingled light,
Inviolate, self-kindled and enhancing that might
Tempt my pride to snuff it, eclipse the inner white
Wonder my warrant forged in passion cannot own.
Teach me that not in trespass do I harvest more
Than your surging tenderness yields to my sight.
I find these lines just enthralling in their meaning and beauty. It is passages
like these that have made me a White-fan, perhaps fanatic. "The inner white
wonder" is a delightful and wondrous phrase to describe both the external and
inner beauty of a woman. It is this "inner white wonder" that gets eclipsed and
snuffed out in marital relationships. The "warrant", is something which
authorizes action, in this case a something "forged in passion" which cannot be
owned. How many men--and women--have 'trespassed' and 'harvested' more than
they should have, more than "surging tenderness" yielded. In the end each
reader has to unpack each poem for themselves. I've just taken a few items out
of the suitcase here to start the ball rolling, to do some intellectual and
spiritual travelling. And, of course, poems that work for me will not
necessarily work for you.
The third section of this book is called 'The Milk, The Honey' and its
twenty-four poems are all 'from Israel.' There are many poems about the Bahá'í
World Centre in White's opus; I'd like to briefly comment on his poem
The
Artefact written in the years immediately preceding the occupation by the
Universal House of Justice of its permanent seat on the slopes of Mount Carmel
above the Arc.
I'm not sure I understand all the poem, but I understand enough of it to give
me a deep satisfaction from reading it. And I read it again and again enjoying
what I do understand and trying to understand more. Poetry is undoubtedly,
among other things, an exploratory activity and White explores the beauty of
the Bahá'í Faith, a beauty expressed in the developments on Mt. Carmel, in
Bahá'í history and in the Bahá'í teachings generally. Poetry also deals with
things that touch us deeply and is a place of pollination and cross-pollination
for the actual, enlarging on, engaging in,life as it goes. Like William Carlos
Williams, White wants to make the unknown shine, like a sunrise.
[24] The known in this poem is the religion White joined over
thirty years before and White in a short epigraph offers a cautionary note from
William Collins, a Bahá'í then working at the Bahá'í World Centre: "We must
resist the temptation to intellectually distance ourselves from the living
reality of the Cause of God, enclosing it in a glass coffin of our pride's
devising, which we circumambulate admiring our own handiwork."
[25]
White begins the poem comparing the Cause to "a shipwrecked victim washed
ashore"
[26] who has been "coffined...in
glass." Having "set it in a place of honour in the central square" we came to
"stare or lean above her." No one, White continues, now near the end of the
second of three stanzas, asked "what exquisite power she might wield." No one
asked what the effect of "Such intolerable beauty" could have, although it was
thought it could "disregulate the city's ordered ways."
Some of the greatest poetry is to be found at the beginning of things: Homer at
the start of Greek civilization, Pindar at the start of the great experiment in
Athenian democracy; Virgil at the start of the Roman Empire, Shakespeare at the
start of the modern age, arguably White at the start of the great drama in
democratic theocracy or the process of the institutionalization of charisma
that is the development of the Bahá'í Faith. Each poet provides his readers
with a
Weltanschauung, a world view, a perspective on the world that
gives it coherence, meaning, a framework.
In the final stanza of the poem under consideration White writes:
Long she lay there and we grew accustomed
to the crystal concentrate of beauty
...............
grateful that grace be so contained
as to pose no threat
This poem is often difficult to contain, to get at or to. By 1980, the Bahá'ís
had been on Mt. Carmel for about a century. The Bab's remains had been entombed
on Mt. Carmel for some sixty years; the Guardian had been gone for nearly
twenty-five. One of the main functions of poetry is to put in verse some of
the intense emotion that accumulates in life. White's poem does this. It begins
in delight, as Robert Frost once said, and ends in wisdom
[27]or, as Wordsworth once put it more mysteriously:
...............................Visionary power
Attends the motions of the viewless winds,
Embodied in the mystery of words[28]
And there is a mystery to White's words, not all the time, but from time to
time and in specific poems like the once being discussed here. There is
something that tantalizes; there's a fragrance, but you've got to like White's
perfume. He integrates thought and imagination, he achieves a high intensity of
poetic and imaginative awareness, in his writing of poetry. He shares this
with his readers and through a participation in a common past, a common memory,
from which his stories, his poems, are so often drawn, there is a
revivification of the virtues inherent in sacred places and people.
Often people and places in history elude us and unless they can be given life
in poetry or some form of art they are lost to us. They remain as dry dust in
history books. White so often brings, awakens, a sense of Presence, of the
Divine, in some historical setting. White bestows a benediction, a sense of
blessedness, upon those who read his poetry. The renewed awareness that readers
gain becomes a source of and support for personal conviction and both the
individual and the community are strengthened. White helps us create our
world. He creates it out of himself
sub specie aeternitatis.
In the remaining four sections of
The Witness of Pebbles White gives us
poems with religious feeling that deepen our awareness of life, poems that
increase our sense of identity and self-understanding, poems that have a simple
grace of image and style, poems that are poeticized prose, poems that deal with
the enigma of life's transience and art's enduring truth, poems that present a
Bahá'í analysis of history as a divinely ordained and logical process and this
era as a transition to an expanded identity and humankind's maturity, more
poems that are tragi-comic and much more.
Perhaps
Mark's Madrigal[29] will
illustrate some of my main contentions about White's poetry more graphically.
The history here is not the history of the Bahá'í Faith but the history, the
experience, of so many millions in the marriage relationship. The poem opens
with some of that colloquial tone and dramatic speech:
Breathes there the man so limp with dread
Who never of his wife hath said,
'I love the wench but wish her dead!'
The rhyme, the lightness, the humour and the tragi-comic continue:
O lissom lass, O languid lad,
In wedlock are love's lessons had.
Then White, having got his reader gently swimming along in this casually poetic
idiom starts to get serious and a little elliptical. The reader has got to do
a little work:
Were freedom gained what is allowed
But from the stranger's hand a shroud?
How many people, feeling imprisoned and gaining their 'freedom' experience a
'shroud' from a 'stranger'? A second relationship so often just does not have
the anticipated pay-off. Some readers will go all the way with White in these
lines.
White keeps the tone and the style light, engaging, irreverent, calling a spade
a spade:
Lives there the woman so unsound
Who never thought, in marriage bound,
I'll sleep best when he's underground!'
.....
For all are granted fleeting terms
And restive are the amorous worms.
......
"What chain hath love that rubs me raw?"
Then, in the last three stanzas, in lines that could come from one of
Shakespeare's sonnets, thought-provoking words and ideas, some enigmatic, some
solemn and serious:
Both winsome maid and handsome squire
Know love's the chief prize we acquire
But count it, wed or celibate,
A hellish torment, soon or late.
So: love is something we
acquire and we may have to experience 'a
hellish torment.' And we reach the climax, the finale in the last two stanzas:
'Tis not the mate by whom we're soured
But love itself which proves us coward
To tame the fear's to tame the fire,
'Tis fear of love of which we tire.
Have done, good folks, with suffering,
Brave choice secures diviner thing.
Love won by courage shall endure
For love, methinks, is love's own cure.
Rejoice, rejoice in love![30]
There is a great deal said here about love, as Shakespeare said in his sonnets.
There is a profundity here as there was in Shakespeare and the reader does not
have to puzzle over the meaning to anything like the same extent. The reward,
the pay-off, in meaning in this poem of White's is reflected in these words of
Marilyn Kallet: "The poem is a kind of flower....rich with the truth of our
lives, a working through of the poet's experience of hurting, healing and
preparation through love."
[31]
White sprinkles humour throughout this his second booklet of poetry. It is part
of White's signature. He opens his final section, "Toddling Toward Salvation"
with a quotation from Thomas Carlyle: "Laughter is a token of virtue. No man
who has once heartily and wholly laughed can be altogether irreclaimably
bad."
[32] I think it is this laughter that
allows White to get away with some profoundly serious poetry in between the
laughs, poetry that is not just serious and profound but very provocative, very
challenging and, at times, threatening to much of our conventional thinking,
both as Bahá'ís and the world of liberal and secular thought.
I'd like to close this analysis of
The Witness of Pebbles with two such
examples. I could choose two from at least a batch of half a dozen poems which
made me think quite seriously about their implications. "A poem," as John
Hatcher emphasizes in his analysis of the poetic process, "is written to be
experienced, not dissected."
[33] The poem
A Sudden Music[34] I
experienced with some force nearly twenty years ago when I first read it. I'd
like to dissect the poem to some extent to try and explain the source of, the
reason for, the impact this poem had on me.
The poem establishes for me an honesty, an introspectivity, a framework for the
examination of the forms of prayer, indeed my very interaction process with
others. The poem makes me take a look at myself. It begins
A taint of preening calculation
makes of our knowledge knowingness,
carries us too soon from innocence
and exaltation.
I'd call the law that White invokes the "is this me?" law. Have I been carried
away by habit, by years of experience and familiarity, from my original sense
of innocence and sense of exaltation? Yes and no, I say to myself. Do I make of
my knowing, now that I know so very much more than I used to when I first
became a Bahá'í, a "knowingness?" Do I do any 'preening' of myself in all this
knowingness? Yes and no I say to myself. White is struggling and taking us
along with him in this struggle to reach higher levels of spiritual reality. He
is struggling, to use Plato's analogy of the cave, to find the light of
understanding from the images cast on the dark walls of life. White is the
active explorer shining the lamp of his poetic insight into the dark shadows of
our lives. Who can fail to be stimulated into an introspection in relation to
one's spiritual life by the following lines which close the poem:
We, deft practioners
of protocols of piety
are stranded on uncertainty
who had entered and then left
that rare Presence,
rehearsed petitioners,
joylessly
and empty-handed..
Writing poems was for White, as it was for Robert Hayden before him in this
emergence of a Bahá'í consciousness in world literature, "a way of coming to
grips with inner and outer realities, a spiritual act, a sort of prayer for
illumination."
[35] Writing poems was a way of
enriching human experience by poetic translation of its particulars, a way of
continually scrutinizing his own experience for answers that could often not be
final ones, final statements, just points along the road of analysis and
description.
[36] His poems were ultimately
acts of consciousness triggered by life, by the intensity of the mind and the
imagination of a man who could be safely and logically called a great
devotional poet.
The spiritual life, one's own spiritual life, certainly needs to be examined
and reexamined. This poem, with many others, provides a point of reflection for
the "deft practitioners," the "rehearsed petitioners" who attempt to experience
that "rare Presence." In some ways, too, this poem is a meditation on the
words of the Bab: "The most acceptable prayer is the one offered with the
utmost spirituality and radiance; its prolongation hath not been and is not
beloved of God."
[37] In the middle of the
poem, having opened and closed the poem expressing with serious doubts about
the value of his "protocols of piety," White inserts the dramatic account of a
"pilgrim child" who was happy while at the Master's Shrine and "broke into
dance rapturously." As White put it in an earlier poem "it is joy that is
remembered."
[38]
A final poem from
The Witness of Pebbles is another personal reflection
on the spiritual journey, on the spiritual value of the phenomenal world. White
gives his insight an artistic form so that others may share in his perception.
White is, among other things, a perceiver and maker of symbols and metaphors.
This is certainly at the centre of how White articulates his role, his station,
as poet, how he interprets his world. As Louis Simpson has stated, discussing
the metaphorical process at the heart of poetry, "Metaphor is a process of
comparing and identifying one thing with another....the ability to see the
relation between one thing and another is almost a definition of
intelligence."
[39]
Of course. each reader's task is to give their meaning to the symbol or
metaphor. Each of us must do that task for ourselves. At the start of the poem
The Other Shore I see that shore as death, the end of a journey, a
personal goal, some promising part of the future. White tells us, to start the
poem:
Let us not stroke too swiftly toward
the green opposite shore
where death rehearses.
This third line brings the focus of the metaphor to 'shore=death.' White
continues:
.............................we have tried
these
pearl-promising waves before
and might guess the danger.
So many times in life we get our hopes up high in relation to some event or
process and there is disappointment and loss. Hope gets a kick in the teeth so
to speak. White suggests that this experience we all have at one time or
another should caution us to view death with some caution, some sense of the
possibilities of danger.
Continuing the metaphor in the second stanza, the metaphor of shore, waves and
sand, White writes:
Recall how always we turn back spent
to the sun-warmed sand
and stand anguished in separate solitudes
though hand in hand,
each to each grown stranger.
For me, White is widening the metaphor here, to include not just the shore but
the place where we go in the summer to swim and enjoy ourselves. We go there
every summer. We seek life's pleasures quite naturally but, so often, these
pleasures lead us to an aloneness. No matter how close we get to those we love,
there is a fundamental aloneness we all must face in life and the experience is
often most acute in our most personal of relationships with family and
friends.
The final stanza is for me the most enigmatic. I have to work hardest to make
out its meaning. The language is veiled. But of course, as John Hatcher points
out perhaps with more emphasis than anything else he has said in his several
books now on the subject, "every man's principle goal in his physical
experience (is) the discerning of spiritual meaning in phenomenal reality and
the subsequent incorporation of that insight into deeds."
[40]
Here is the phenomenal reality White closes his poem with:
Not that the brave bird lied. But that
we, young, too soon said
Land! Land! and, plunging, did not see
his torn pinion, his bloodied head.
Ease us, wise love, toward this wet danger.
The question, of course, is, 'what does this mean?' White so often himself
said, "don't ask me what it means!" It is the task of the reader to give the
poem meaning, indeed, to give his life meaning. Just as the stones, "every
least pebble...resound again with Thy praise," so, too, may our own dear lives
find "wings" and "ladders" for our ascent so that we may understand the deeper
meanings of existence--and the beauty of the last stanza of a poem like
this.
Part of the poet's task is to give historical perspective to an era, an epoch,
an age. White here is talking to me about my experience since the 1950s in both
the Bahá'í community and in my personal life. Back in the late 1950s as a young
Bahá'í I had far too high an expectation regarding the response of western
society to the religion I had come to believe in. No one had lied to me; "the
big bird," whoever it was that planted the latest wisdom in my mind, had left
my impressionable soul with the view that the world was going to respond to the
Cause in much greater numbers than it did. And marriage was going to be a much
easier process than I had ever anticipated. But in the next forty years I
experience "his torn pinion" "his bloodied head." Was it mine? Was it my
society? My religion? You read the poem and your mind plays with the options,
the optional meaning systems that poetry presents. For White's readers are
examining, they are part of that wider process:
The Witness
of
Pebbles.
Notes:
[1] 1 Geoffrey Nash, "The Heroic Soul and the
Ordinary Self,"
Bahá'í Studies: Vol.10, 1982, pp.23-31; that same year a
professor of English at the University of Tel-Aviv, Alex Aronson, reviewed the
first two books of White's poetry. His review appeared in
World Order,
Summer 1982, pp.60-63.
[2] Contained all of Hayden's poetry from 1940
to 1962.
[3] The emergence of a Bahá'í consciousness in
world literature, when examined with an academic microscope, will be found to
take place in a range of writings by a range of authors. An examination of the
subject 'world literature' on the Internet suggests a multiplicity of
possibilities. This book is concerned virtually entirely with Roger White's
contribution to this emergence of what is a complex and bigger picture.
[4]
A. Alvarez,
Beyond All the Fiddle: Essays 1955-1967, Allen Lane,
London, 1968, p.40.
[5]
Roger White,
The Witness of Pebbles, George Ronald, Oxford, 1981,
p.v.
[6]
idem
[7] In "Poetic Truth: Three Interpretations,"
Tzvetan Todorov in
Essays in Criticism, 1988, p.107.
[8]
idem
[9]
Roger White, "An Articulate Silence,"
Essay Sent to Author, April
1991
[10] Richard Kuhns,
Literature and
Philosophy: Structures of Experience, Routledge and Kegan Paul, London,
1971, p.22.
[11] David Daiches,
Critical Approaches to
Literature, 2nd edition, Longman, London, 1981(1956), p.110. Daiches
describes Coleridge's view of the nature of the poetic process in these words.
[12]
Ann T. Forster,
Theodore Roethke's Meditative Sequences, Edwin Mellen
Press, Queenston, Ontario, 1985, p.30.
[13]
ibid., p.5.
[14]
ibid.,p.6.
[15]
Roger White,
op.cit., p.14.
[16]
Jeffrey Meyers, editor,
Robert Lowell: Interviews and Memoirs,
University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, 1988, p.127.
[17]
David Daiches,
op.cit., p.161.
[18] George Saintsbury,
A History of
English Criticism, William Blackwood and Sons Ltd., London, 1911, p.522.
[19] Richard Kuhns,
op.cit., p.83.
[20] Susanne Langer,
Problems of Art,
Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1957, p.124.
[21]
Roger White,
The Witness of Pebbles, p.62.
[22]
Marilyn Kallet,
Honest Simplicity in William Carlos Williams' "Asphodel,
That Greeny Flower," Louisiana State UP, Baton Rouge, 1985, p.21.
[23] Ted Hughes, quoted in
Ted Hughes: A
Critical Study, Terry Gifford and Neil Roberts, Faber and Faber, London,
1981, p.39.
[24]
William Carlos Williams,
Autobiography, p.1.
[25] Roger White,
op.cit.,p.96.
[26] idem
[27] Robert Frost in
Coleridge on the
Language of Verse, Emerson R. Marks, Princeton UP, 1981, p.108.
[28] William Wordsworth,
Prelude V:
lines 595-97.
[29] Roger White,
op.cit.,
pp.115-116.
[30]
idem
[31]
Marilyn Kallet,
Honest Simplicity in William Carlos Williams' "Asphodel,
That Greeny Flower," Louisiana State UP, Baton Rouge, 1985, p.15.
[32] Thomas Carlyle in Roger White,
op.cit., p.188.
[33] John Hatcher,
From the Auroral
Darkness, George Ronald, Oxford, 1984, p.240.
[34] Roger White,
op.cit. pp.80-1.
[35] Fred M. Fetrow,
Robert Hayden,
Twayne Publishers, Boston, 1984, p.58.
[36] ibid., p. 101.
[37] Selections from the Writings of the
Bab, Haifa,1976, p.78.
[38] Roger White, "Lines from a Battlefield,"
Another Song, p.112.
[39] Louis Simpson,
An Introduction to
Poetry, St. Martin's Press, NY, 1967, p.6.
[40] John Hatcher,
From the Auroral
Darkness, George Ronald, Oxford, 1984, p.244.