|
Photo by Cecil Beaton
Harold Pinter's M.C. Gardner
Harold
Pinter It is the dead of night. The long dead look out towards The new dead Walking towards them As the dead embrace Those who are long dead Walking towards them As they meet again For the first and last time War is a scream in the night that
echoes down corridors of silence. Pinter rages with the futility of a latter day
prophet who knows that God is not only dead, but more frightfully, that he is an
American who is deaf, as well: With
the smell of America
's God.
The big pricks are out
They'll fuck everything in sight. One
feels in the next breath that Pinter might apologize to bloodthirsty wild
animals for making the unseemly comparison. "The
hypocrisy behind its public declarations and its own actions is almost a joke. Falling towers,
Jerusalem
, Unreal "From his earliest writings until his latest plays and poetry, the theme --
explicit or implied, verbal or suggested in silences -- has never swerved: human
beings are so utterly vulnerable, so contingent on powers without pity, so
scandalously naked to the techno-chemical fury of the Twentieth Century, that
those who have a voice and a language must use it to create the record -- by
word in combination with unspeakable silence -- of Buchenwald, Nagasaki,
Vietnam, Chile, and Nicaragua." Out
of his anger flows a torrent of jeremiads. From
the end of American Football:
We blew them into fucking shit.
They are eating it.
Praise the Lord for all good things.
We blew their balls into shards of dust.
Into shards of fucking dust.
We did it.
Harold
Pinter
August 1991 The
reader will note that the date of the poem corresponds with the end of the first
Gulf War. It could just as easily be read to signify the end of the second. In
either it is clear the wining is a
dubious endeavor. As William Faulkner observed,
"… victory is an illusion of philosophers and fools."
Where was the
dead body found?
Who found the dead body?
Was the dead body dead when found?
How was the dead body found?
Did
you wash the dead body?
Did you close both its eyes?
Did you bury the body?
Did you leave it abandoned?
Did you kiss the dead body? The
final silence of "Did you kiss the dead body?" is the heartbreaking
obverse of the angered irony of the earlier "kiss," quoted above. When
we remember that the first poem of the collection, Meeting,
closes with, "They cry and they kiss / As they meet again / For the first
and last time," we hear the faint echo of Rilke. We remember Elegies that sought language
where languages end. We sense that Pinter's rage is book-ended by his
humanity. Those
who do not condemn the atrocities wrought in their name are condemned in turn.
Pinter's outrage was the most humane voice to arise from the Iraqi Wars.
These poems are an unsettling commentary on the American and British
enterprise. Jeremiah knew that
It will be quite chilly
But as the day progresses
The sun will come out.
And the Afternoon will be dry and warm.
In the evening the moon will shine
And be quite bright.
There will be, it has to be said,
A brisk wind
But it will die out by
Nothing further will happen.
This is the last forecast.
|