6-1-2001
STEVIE SMITH
Poems:
Thoughts about the Christian Doctrine of Eternal Hell
b.
Sept. 20, 1902, Hull, Yorkshire, Eng. d.
March 7, 1971, London
pseudonym
of FLORENCE MARGARET SMITH, British poet who expressed an original and visionary
personality in her work, combining a lively wit with penetrating honesty and an
absence of sentiment.
For
most of her life Smith lived with an aunt in the same house in Palmers Green, a
northern London suburb. After attending school there, she worked, until the
early 1950s, as a secretary in the London offices of a magazine publisher. She
then lived and worked at home, caring for her elderly aunt who had raised her
and who died at age 96 in 1968. Palmers Green and the people there are subjects
for some of her poetry.
In
the 1960s Smith's poetry readings became popular, and she made radio broadcasts
and recordings. She also wrote three novels as well as short stories, literary
reviews, and essays, but she is remembered chiefly for her poetry.
The
Collected Poems of Stevie Smith (1975), illustrated with her Thurber-like
sketches, includes her first book of poems, A Good Time Was Had by All (1937)
and Not Waving but Drowning (1957), the title poem of which appears in many
anthologies. The lines of her verse are often short and telling. They slip in
and out of metre and rest on assonance and broken rhyme in ways that arrest
attention. She addresses serious themes with a clarity critics often call
childlike. The theme of death recurs often. Me Again: Uncollected Writings of
Stevie Smith, Illustrated by Herself (1981) is a posthumous compilation of her
prose writings, letters, and previously uncollected poetry.
A Selected Bibliography Poetry
A Good Time Was Had By All (1937)
Tender Only to One (1938)
Mother, What is Man? (1942)
Harold's Leap (1950)
Not Waving But Drowning (1957)
Selected Poems (1962)
The Frog Prince and Other Poems
(1966)
The Best Beast (1969)
Two in One (1971)
Scorpion and Other Poems (1972)
Collected Poems (1975) Prose
A Very Pleasant Evening with Stevie
Smith: Selected Short Prose (1995) Fiction
A Novel on Yellow Paper (1936)
Over the Frontier (1938)
The Holiday (1949)
Some Are More Human Than Others
(1958)
Me Again: Uncollected Writings of
Stevie Smith (1981)
|
|
|
Nobody
heard him, the dead man,
But
still he lay moaning:
I
was much further out than you thought
And
not waving but drowning.
Poor
chap, he always loved larking
And
now he's dead
It
must have been too cold for him his heart gave way,
They
said.
Oh,
no no no, it was too cold always
(Still
the dead one lay moaning)
I
was much too far out all my life
And
not waving but drowning.
To hear the author reading this poem click here
|
|
|
I
always remember your beautiful flowers
And
the beautiful kimono you wore
When
you sat on the couch
With
that tigerish crouch
And
told me you loved me no more.
What
I cannot remember is how I felt when you were unkind
All
I know is, if you were unkind now I should not mind.
Ah
me, the power to feel exaggerated, angry and sad
The
years have taken from me. Softly I go now, pad pad.
|
|
I
longed for companionship rather,
But
my companions I always wished farther.
And
now in the desolate night
I
think only of the people i should like to bite.
|
|
I
do not ask for mercy for understanding for peace
And
in these heavy days I do not ask for release
I
do not ask that suffering shall cease.
I
do not pray to God to let me die
To
give an ear attentive to my cry
To
pause in his marching and not hurry by.
I
do not ask for anything I do not speak
I
do not question and I do not seek
I
used to in the day when I was weak.
Now
I am strong and lapped in sorrow
As
in a coat of magic mail and borrow
From
Time today and care not for tomorrow.
|
|
Deeply
morbid deeply morbid was the girl who typed the letters
Always
out of office hours running with her social betters
But
when daylight and the darkness of the office closed about her
Not
for this ah not for this her office colleagues came to doubt her
It
was that look within her eye
Why
did it always seem to say goodbye?
Joan
her name was and at lunchtime
Solitary
solitary
She
would go and watch the pictures In the National Gallery
All
alone all alone
This
time with no friend beside her
She
would go and watch the pictures
All
alone.
Will
she leave her office colleagues
Will
she leave her evening pleasures
Toil
within a friendly bureau
Running
later in her leisure?
All
alone all alone
Before
the pictures she seemed turned to stone.
Close
upon the Turner pictures
Closer
than a thought may go
Hangs
her eye and all the colours
Leap
into a special glow
All
for her, all alone
All
for her, all for Joan.
First
the canvas where the ocean
Like
a mighty animal
With
a wicked motion
Leaps
for sailors' funeral
Holds
her painting. Oh the creature
Oh
the wicked virile thing
With
its skin of fleck and shadow
Stretching
tightening over him.
Wild
yet caputured wild yet caputured
By
the painter, Joan is quite enraptured.
Now
she edges from the canvas
To
another loved more dearly
Where
the awful light of purest
Sunshine
falls across the spray,
There
the burning coasts of fancy
Open
to her pleasure lay.
All
alone all alone
Come
away come away
All
alone.
Lady
Mary, Lady Kitty
The
Honourable Featherstonehaugh
Polly
Tommy from the office
Which
of these shall hold her now?
Come
away come away
All
alone.
The
spray reached out and sucked her in
It
was hardly a noticed thing
That
Joan was there and is not now
(Oh
go and tell young Featherstonehaugh)
Gone
away, gone away
All
alone.
She
stood up straight
The
sun fell down
There
was no more of London Town
She
went upon the painted shore
And
there she walks for ever more
Happy
quite
Beaming
bright
In
a happy happy light
All
alone.
They
say she was a morbid girl, no doubt of it
And
what befell her clearly grew out of it
But
I say she's a lucky one
To
walk for ever in that sun
And
as I bless sweet Turner's name
I
wish that I could do the same.
|
|
The
pleasures of friendship are exquisite,
How
pleasant to go to a friend on a visit!
I
go to my friend, we walk on the grass,
And
the hours and moments like minutes pass.
|
|
Happiness
is silent, or speaks equivocally for friends,
Grief
is explicit and her song never ends,
Happiness
is like England, and will not state a case,
Grief,
like Guilt, rushes in and talks apace.
|
|
January 19, 2010
by Stevie Smith;
introduced by Andrew McCulloch
Poets are not always well-represented by their best-known poems but Stevie Smith (1902–1971) is one of the fortunate: "Not Waving But Drowning" is a perfect metaphor for the dangerous undertow beneath the whimsical surface current of much of her work. She may appear to be waving but she knows we are all further out than we think. Death fascinated her: she called it "the only god who must come when he is called". But it was not the only god in which she believed – or tried to. In a lecture she gave in 1968 – "Some Impediments to Christian Commitment" – we can see her wrestling with dogma and belief, caught between the "logic" of Catholics and the tendency of Anglicans to "leave ends dangling and hope for the best".
The same fierce, futile desire for conviction drives this almost Metaphysical attempt to "prove" immortality. Things begin promisingly with the quibble on "one" as numeral and pronoun but the mathematical conceit starts to unravel as soon as she admits that "earthly . . . totalling" has "no part at all / In 'heavenly kingdom-come'", and falls to bits completely in the last stanza where all numbers do is remind her of the sheer enormity of what she is trying to argue. Even if the argument implodes, however, the poem is a magnificent success, partly because of the way its loosening shape lets the poet’s fears leak in, but mainly because it rehearses a fundamental truth – that despite the inadequacy of reason, faith alone, for most of us, is not enough.
Edmonton, thy cemetery
In which I love to tread
Has roused in me a dreary thought
For all the countless dead,
Ah me, the countless dead.
Yet I believe that one is one
And shall for ever be,
And while I hold to this belief
I walk, oh cemetery,
Thy footpaths happily.
And I believe that two and two
Are but an earthly sum
Whose totalling has no part at all
In heavenly kingdom-come,
I love the dead, I cry, I love
Each happy, happy one.
Till doubt returns with dreary face
And fills my heart with dread
For all the tens and tens and tens
That must make up a hundred,
And I begin to sing with him
As if Belief had never been
Ah me, the countless dead, ah me
The countless countless dead.
STEVIE SMITH (1962)
Pretty
by Stevie Smith; introduced by Sophie Hughes
Published: 14 February 2012
In 1833, Coleridge proposed that “The definition of good Prose is – proper words in their proper places – of good Verse – the most proper words in their proper places”. Paul Muldoon alluded to this maxim in 1995 when he dismissed the suggestion that his poem “The Birth” contained deliberately “affected” phrases: “it’s not as if I’m interested in sending people to dictionaries or anything. These are absolutely the right words – at least they try to be the right words in the right order”.
For Stevie Smith (1902–71), too, the discernment of the “right words” has nothing to do with linguistic elitism. Rather, in her poem “Pretty” she explores the overlooked qualities of a word entrenched in the vernacular. Smith’s poems often draw attention to the deeper significance of communications and events. In the case of her best-known poem, “Not Waving But Drowning”, the death of a man who is unaided by onlookers as he drowns at sea is symbolic of a life spent being misunderstood. In “Pretty”, Smith’s subject is the “underrated” word, “pretty”; her agenda is its revival through poetry.
In the first stanza, “pretty” sits awkwardly in its poetic context: “In November the leaf is pretty when it falls”. The reader’s inclination is to see the leaf as something more figurative than simply “pretty”. But repeating a word, as Gertrude Stein maintained, can transform it. Through eighteen repetitions, Smith recovers the word “pretty” from poetic ignominy, each time making it more suited to its subject (“the sky”, “the owl”, “a field in the evening”). In these new surroundings “pretty” is the “right” word and is, itself, cut free, “delivered entirely from humanity”, by whom it was underrated in the first place.
Pretty
Why is the word pretty so underrated?
In November the leaf is pretty when it falls.
The stream grows deep in the woods after rain
And in the pretty pool the pike stalks.
He stalks his prey, and this is pretty
too,
The prey escapes with an underwater flash
But not for long, the great fish has him now.
The pike is a fish who always has his prey
And this is pretty. The water rat is
pretty.
His paws are not webbed, he cannot shut his nostrils
As the otter can and the beaver, he is torn between
The land water. Not ‘torn’, he does not mind.
The owl hunts in the evening, and it is
pretty
The lake water below him rustles with ice
There is frost coming from the ground, in the air mist.
All this is pretty, it could not be prettier.
Yes, it could always be prettier, the eye
abashes.
It is becoming an eye that cannot see enough,
Out of the wood the eye climbs. This is prettier.
A field in the evening, tilting up.
The field tilts to the sky. Though it is
late,
The sky is lighter than the hill field.
All this looks easy, but really, it is extraordinary.
Well, it is extraordinary to be so pretty.
And it is careless, and that is always
pretty.
This field, this owl, this pike, this pool are careless,
As Nature is always careless and indifferent.
Who sees, who steps, means nothing, and this is pretty.
So a person can come along like a thief –
pretty! –
Stealing a look, pinching the sound and feel,
Lick the icicle broken from the bank.
And still say nothing at all, only cry pretty.
Cry pretty, pretty, pretty and you’ll be
able
Very soon not even to cry pretty.
And so to be delivered entirely from humanity.
This is prettiest of all, it is very pretty.
STEVIE SMITH (1959)
Published: 2 January 2013
Stevie Smith was born Florence Margaret Smith, in 1902, and was nicknamed “Peggy” by her family (“Stevie” came later). She was a devoted niece who lived with her aunt for over sixty years in Palmers Green, the North London suburb she often celebrated for its almond blossom. Having retired early from publishing, Smith was sole carer to her elderly aunt (who was confined to her bedroom from 1962). Smith continued to juggle new demands for her to perform her unusually exclamatory poems. Three novels written in a breathless personal idiom had eclipsed her early poetry but things were changing: Selected Poems (1962) was followed by The Frog Prince (1966) and publishers were at last prepared to include some of the Edward Lear-like drawings she produced as companions to her poems.
This poem of spring with its Sixties colour scheme green/red, ginger/pink and bright “fabricated” things, appeared posthumously in Scorpion and Other Poems (1972; she died in March that year), with her drawing of a dancer in a jaunty skirt. “It is life we are talking about”, she reminds her listener, when “enough has been said to show” – with a run of o-rhymes – delight in the immediacy and “shine” of gardens and house fronts after rain. Promising an ode to colour, she appreciates “bright looks”, but as the puddle reduces the sky to “No colour . . . a negative”, she speaks with foreboding of a “landscape of the dead”, drawing perhaps on Browning’s “Childe Roland”, a favourite poem. As for the exhortation to men to “Seize colours quick” it is, according to Smith’s biographer Frances Spalding, her “Aunt’s habit of exclaiming ‘Men!’” that the poet echoes. In a radio talk for schools, in June 1966, Smith described how writing helped defuse the “pressure of daily life, of having to earn one’s living, of one’s relations with other people, . . . the pressure of despair and the pressure, too, of pleasures that take one’s breath away – colours, animals tearing about, birds fighting to get the best bit of bacon rind”. So practised in her documentary style, splicing clips from conversation with everyday surroundings, Smith reprises Virginia Woolf’s hopes for the novel, examining the “moment” of “an ordinary mind on an ordinary day”.
The grass
is green
The tulip
is red
A ginger
cat walks over
The pink
almond petals on the flower bed.
Enough has
been said to show
It is life
we are talking about. Oh
Grateful
colours, bright looks! Well, to go
On.
Fabricated things too – front doors and gates,
Bricks,
slates, paving stones – are coloured
And as it
has been raining and is sunny now
They
shine. Only that puddle
Which,
reflecting the height of the sky
Quite
gives one a feeling of vertigo, shows
No colour,
is a negative. Men!
Seize
colours quick, heap them up while you can.
But
perhaps it is a false tale that says
The
landscape of the dead
Is
colourless.