*p. âNew Selected Poemsâ gathers something old, new by Matthias
- p. SOUTH BEND â John Matthias opens and closes his latest book, âNew Selected Poems,â with two poems set in the American Midwest, âSwimming at Midnightâ and âSwell.â
Itâs a deliberate attempt, he says, to assert his identity as an American poet.
âThereâs a passage in âSwellâ about my travels where I say itâs taken me a lifetime to prefer âhere,â " Matthias says. âI think that as one gets older, one circles back into the direction of oneâs starting point. ⊠That sort of parallels my recent experience. I had thought the shape of my life was fairly permanent, that I would write in England and do my teaching here. When I really returned here to stay, Midwestern themes began to emerge again.â
Born in Columbus, Ohio, in 1941, Matthias graduated from the writing program at Stanford University in 1966 and moved to England. A year later, Ernest Sandeen hired him to teach poetry and literature at the University of Notre Dame, so he and his wife, Diana, moved to South Bend. During the â70s and â80s, Matthias and his family split their time between East Anglia in England, where Diana was born and raised, and South Bend. For the most part, Matthias wrote while in England and taught while in South Bend.
âMy career has been peculiar given that I spent so much time writing in England and dealing with English and European subject matter and historical themes that sometimes seemed remote from American readers and sometimes even got me reviewed as an English poet,â he says. âThe body of work is obviously by an American poet who has traveled a lot, and the subject matter is not always typical of an American poet, but it is by an American. I wanted to make that obvious by way of the structure of the book.â
*p. A box set of poetry- p. âNew Selected Poemsâ functions much like a box set by a musician: Itâs not a complete collected works, but it does provide a comprehensive overview to a 40-year career distinguished by Matthiasâ highly literate but ultimately quite personal voice as a poet. Lyrical or experimental, original or a translation, playful or scholarly, Matthiasâ poetry engages readers in a lively and exacting investigation of history, the arts and his own life.
For âNew Selected Poems,â Matthias wanted to include both short and long poems, something he didnât do the last time he selected poems for this type of book. âSwimming at Midnightâ contained his short poems only, while âBeltane at Aphelionâ contained long poems only. It was a tactical error, he says: The former sold well, and the latter didnât.
âClearly, the question of length is a factor when you sit down to read a poem,â he says. âIf itâs a page long, youâre more likely to read it. Without a degree of dedication to a poem, youâre not as likely to read a long poem. It requires a different level of engagement. If you put them all in one volume, the likelihood is greater that the reader will be tempted to give the long poems a try because of the short poems.â
Most of all, Matthias says, he wanted to include most of 1991âs âA Gathering of Waysâ because it had never been published in England, and âNew Selected Poemsâ would be published there as well as in the United States.
âI think itâs the most important of the long poems,â he says. âThen came the question of how to include it. Itâs over 100 pages long. Put it in the middle, or spread it around? I decided to spread it around.â
Aside from the inclusion of âFacts From an Apocryphal Midwestâ from the 1980s in the first section, âNew Selected Poemsâ follows a chronological and thematic structure. The last third of the book includes new poems that have never before been published in book form âscatteredâ among other recent poems.
âThe poems are not in the same order they were in the original booksâ Matthias says. âThey were written at about the same time, but Iâve shuffled the poems so that they begin to talk to each other.â
*p. A grand collage- p. A writer, Matthias says, has the âability in poetry to control and manipulate sound,â a prime motivation and pleasure for him as a writer.
âThis can be done in prose as well, but not to the same extent, unless you happen to be (James) Joyce or (Samuel) Beckett,â he says. âPoetry, before anything else, is sounds. A lot of nonsense has been written about âthe music of poetry,â but unless there is a music, a compelling rhythm of some kind, you really donât have a poem before you but something else. There are hundreds of different ways to make such rhythms, but the pleasure of making them sustains the mind and emotions with a strange kind of paradoxical joy even in the midst of engaging difficult and painful material.â
Many times, Matthias has been tagged as a poet of place, a description that skims the surface of his work.
âYou donât want (references to places) to sound like nostalgic laments for the old homestead,â he says. âI hope none of them has sounded that way. ⊠If you look at the poems, theyâre not landscape poems. Theyâre all history poems. Iâm interested in what happened someplace.â
The same reading applies, Matthias says, to his many poems about musicians.
âTheyâre poems about peopleâs lives,â he says. âThe biographical impulse is another factor that isnât too often remarked upon. A lot of the poems are poems simply about interesting people. I think good biography, and of course thereâs a great deal of bad biography and popular biography, is perhaps the most profound expression of a life.â
Matthiasâ most recent poems use his family life as their starting point but, typically, incorporate external subjects and themes. âLetter to an Unborn Grandson,â the newest poem in âNew Selected Poems,â borrows from William Carlos Williams and serves as âa kind of homage to him as an American poet.â âSwellâ begins and ends in a fishing boat on Walloon Lake in Michigan, a place where Matthias and his family vacationed when he was a child and where he and Diana visited in 2000. The poem, however, is about Ernest Hemingwayâs Nick Adams stories, the writings of F. Scott Fitzgerald and Goethe, and America in the 1950s and England in the 1960s, among other subjects.
âIâm not actually âagainstâ personal or family poems when I say there are too many being written; itâs just that one should be aware that oneâs family photo album may not be terribly interesting to other people,â Matthias says. âIt all depends on what you do with the material, how interesting you make it and whether or not the context gives it some resonance.â
In arranging the poems in âNew Selected Poems,â Matthias says, he considered the placement and juxtaposition of poems so that his objective, historical poems would give his personal poems a context within his body of work.
âIn putting together a âSelected Poems,â one is making a kind of grand collage where poem talks to poem and a version of oneâs self at 20 talks to a version of oneâs self at 60,â he says. âIn some ways, the historical poems exist as a critique of the personal poems, and the other way around. And certainly the poet at 20 and the poet at 60 are very suspicious of each other.â
*p. The rewards of teaching- p. Matthias plans to retire from teaching in May and dedicated âNew Selected Poemsâ âto my students at the University of Notre Dame 1967-2004.â Itâs his students who come to mind first when he reflects on his experiences as a teacher.
âInitially, looking back at a career thatâs nearly 40 years old, I think of the students Iâm in closest touch with and whose careers Iâve followed and who have published books,â he says and lists new books by former students, including Joe Francis
Doerr, Robert Archambeau, Kevin Ducey, Jenny Boully and Beth Ann Fennelly, as examples.
âThe one thing Iâve consistently had is excellent students, and as one gets older, oneâs former students become your closest friends, perhaps more so than your current colleaguesâ because of differences in age between him and younger faculty members, he says. âThe dedication is to be taken seriously.â
At the moment, Matthias is beginning to block out a poem inspired by his wifeâs maternal grandfather, who joined the British navy at the age of 12 as a midshipman and eventually retired as an admiral.
âThis is again a biographical interest, but the poem wonât be exclusively about him,â he says. âThatâs not the only thing Iâve been thinking about.â
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