And let also say that I am taking this stanza, this paragraph, completely as if itwere a (and couldn’t it easily be?) standalone. As something profound unto
itself.
But BEAUTY? Pah! Trying to envision these words without attempting to look
through the eyes of the poet is something, but it is not easy, it starts out to
be quite a feat. Especially because they would MEAN something so very different
than if the words had come from me (and surely different from what you might
come to, I suppose, if one supposes such things). His, I assume, might have
been some kind of almost universal IDEAL, but based in reality, upon those he
knew. An attainable one ideal? He no doubt had one or two candidates ind mind
with whom he was well acquainted. Idealist that he was, it would have been a
cinch for him to have conjured up one of his muses.
I’m no scholar. I just have my big, awkward movements in that area. Which,
without picking up anything except, again, this particular Selected,
has me thinking O’Hara had in mind as representative of beautiful that
New York School muse that we would often him dipping his metaphorical
ink into,Jane Freilicher. Or it could be any number of such muses. But Jane,
The New York School muse.
But O'Hara was gay, I might point out (as I do, and surely others have made
a note of this as well. Or have they? This is how much I am NOT a scholar.
I’ve made it loud and clear so often over the years, that he’s my favorite poet
out of all of them, yes, the audacity, and I stand by it) – oh, if I could even be
a smidge as dishy and pithy and have even a tenth of whatever must have
generally floated around behind that tall young forehead.
So, beauty; back when it meant something. Perhaps towards the tail-end of
when it might have, just to add that, as if it were something that we knew.
But those three sentences. That singular paragraph (I love to imagine that
final word, over, as it stands by itself on its own line, as intentional
enjambment; form might have been something that was beginning to also
lose meaning, by this time, which I say as if it means something, but as far
as I can tell, scholar that I ain’t, it still was a veritable ruler, a stick that
might be, ahem, shoved up something, and surely often and (even today)
sometimes happily. Someplace. It seems so ... and would he not have
appreciated the word that just came to mind ... ineffectual?
But a philosophical bent seems clear to me, in that he wore his ideals upon
his sleeves, if you ask me, but why would you? AND he was gay, so any
concept of beauty he goes on to reduce in whatever way gets fractured
in so many of the ways and means of BEAUTY, at least to this small reader,
when it comes to how to interpret what the writer literally meant when HE
wrote the word.
But the simplicity of how those three sentences can, for me, indeed, conjured,
perhaps in pieces and parts deliberately Doctor Frank’ened (har har!) hap
hazardly together, building someone in particular I’ve never met, or just as
easily suggesting a particular half a dozen or more with whom I am at least
acquainted. How EASY that lovely paragraph can mean. And if that is what
happens when I read it, it would likely be just as magical to anyone else
who does. Try, it. You can, you know. Let me know if it works.
If so, just look how many of us are getting presently all bent out of shape,
getting giddy within our own recollections or collections. Our own selections
conjured from just a few lines in this particular selected poems, by my favorite
poet all time (I will keep being on the record just to say that much). A quote
that appears in one of my favorites poems by him, “MEDITATIONS ON AN
EMERGENCY.”
I mean, (Call 9-1-1!), who else but the man who not only put New York City
on the postmodern map, but turned it into an ideal—a place in which I’ve
never lived, have but taken up space within for no longer than a week or
two at a time. Such a beauty. (“Aw, shucks! Really?”)
But yet from a distance of all of the vast expanses from him and his words to
here, he can yet today have an unscholarly hick sitting in San Francisco
seeing BEAUTIFUL, seeing BEAUTY, as if truly knowing seeing it appear before
him in Cinemascope. Loud and clear. And that’s sincere.