James Merrill:
Other Writings
Washington University Libraries, St. Louis, Spring
2001
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Table of Contents
Introduction Steven Meyer James Merrill's Narrative Prose Garth Hallberg The Summer Place: James Merrill's Fantastical Wallpaper Ida McCall and Margaret Funkhouser The Occasional Verse Jennifer Kronovet and Jeffrey Shotts "best not shown too widely": James Merrill's Combinatorial Texts Jason Stumpf James Merill, Playwright Todd Borlik The Spiritual Archive Beneath the Poetic Artifice: A "Double Vision" of James Merrill's Poetry Matthew McClelland and Ryan Sherry Hans Lodeizen Rachel Slaughter and Dolsy Smith Online Exhibitions Special Collections Home |
"best
not shown too widely": James Merrill's Combinatorial Texts
Jason Stumpf
For all his flirtation with combinatorial practice, it only appears explicitly in a few places in Merrill's body of work. One of only a very few such instances occurs in "ANAGRAM/ANAGRAMME," the fourth section of the poem "EIGHT BITS." Merrill incorporates words using letters from the name of Italian film director Pier Paolo Pasolini, and does so impressively, in rhyming couplets in both English and French.
Here
Pasolini
lies, decorum's foil,
Ci-gît
Pasolini
, après de longs effrois,
Unlike his unpublished work in a similar vein, Merrill is clearly in control here. Typically, he has chosen a difficult construct, and executed it brilliantly, seemingly without effort. Perhaps this is possible in this instance because Merrill is not using the anagram strictly, as in his unpublished writings. He does not relinquish control of the lines, but couches combinatorial writing within lines that remain, stylistically, his own. Thus, the emphasis of the section, and of the poem as a whole, lies in the found quality that informs its creation, not so much in the poet's struggle against the text. Here we see the divide between Merrill's combinatorial texts and his serious work. In his combinatorial texts Merrill often tightly proscribes his composition within a narrow set of rules and then allows those rules to govern his writing, something he was unwilling to do in a published work. Even in his poems which use material from Ouija sessions, supposedly found texts, Merrill remains in control stylistically. The overwhelming bulk of Merrill's combinatorial texts is never taken up to be worked into finished poems, but remains a raw exploration of language. Indeed, common to all combinatorial texts is an unfinished quality. Their challenge is infectious, as one wonders what other permutations are possible, or what ideas the text will yield. If nothing else, these texts show another side of a poet devoted to the mystical and formal aspects of poetry as he takes guiding conceits to extremes. They provide examples of the connection between many aspects of Merrill's writing life: his letters, formalism, interaction with culture, and a belief fundamental to poetry, that the manipulation of language gives rise to meaning.
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| Last update: Thursday, June 28, 2001 |
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