糖心Vlog

Seamus Heaney: great poet, inspirational teacher

David Gewanter recalls the time he spent studying under the late poet

Published on
September 5, 2013
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Source: Miles Cole

Heaney, maybe hearing few ideas from us, wanted us to learn things first, to render the local terrain of our own experience and languages

W.鈥塀. Yeats saw a choice: perfection of the life or perfection of the work. In schools we know the great devoted teacher, the classroom magician who transforms minds but doesn鈥檛 publish: he lives through his students. Then there is the respected but memorably strange scholar: lively on paper, offstage in the world.

Did Seamus Heaney make such a choice?

In the 1980s, his poetry workshop was held each winter at Harvard鈥檚 Sever Hall, a聽squat and thick-pillared place 鈥 waiting there, we knew his lines, 鈥淏etween my finger and my thumb/The squat pen rests.鈥 The literary Heaney was already present, both for the over-brushed Harvard students, and for us 础耻蝉濒盲苍诲别谤蝉 who joined the class. (I聽had once met him on a college trip to Ireland in 1974; he read us bog poems and fed us dinner in his home. All I remember of the evening are the strawberries.)

Then he stepped in, hair dishevelled, damp-faced, hustling in from the snows. Later, we realised he looked like this every class, regardless of the weather.

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He talked of Frost, and said: 鈥淣ew poems happen in a darkened room 鈥 I can only lead you to that place.鈥 Then he asked: 鈥淲ould anyone want to recite a poem by heart?鈥

Heaney taught by example, challenge, sly humour and genial conspiracy. He invited us to poetry鈥檚 long conversation the way you鈥檇 sneak someone in to hear wedding toasts. Which speech proved the love? What poet, for instance, could mix black humour and elegy? John Crowe Ransom: 鈥淚t was a聽transmogrifying bee/Came droning down on Chucky鈥檚 old bald head/And sat and put the poison.鈥 Chucky was a hen.

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Who could praise himself nonchalantly, then make you agree? Frank O鈥橦ara: for the Sun had told him, 鈥測ou may/not be the greatest thing on earth, but/you鈥檙e different鈥.

Who could do you a nasty twist in a last line? Philip Larkin: 鈥淥r lied.鈥 Heaney turned an air-dagger. From the poem Lament for the Makaris he might read us just the vowels or consonants: 鈥渄on鈥檛 listen for the message now.鈥

W.鈥塁. Williams once warned, 鈥渘o ideas but in things鈥; Heaney, maybe hearing few ideas from us, wanted us to learn things first, to render the local terrain of our own experience and languages.

We tried out three-line dinnseanchas 鈥 place聽poems 鈥 and made lists of names. I聽tallied up basketball phrases that sounded dirty, calling it 鈥淭he Low Post鈥. But that year, Heaney had just published The Names of聽the Hare: 鈥淭he hare, call him scotart/big-fellow, bouchart,/the O鈥橦are, the jumper,/the rascal, the racer.//Beat-the-pad, white-face,/funk-the-ditch, shit-ass.鈥

And hadn鈥檛 Heaney matched Ransom鈥檚 chilling wit in his early poem Mid-Term Break? The speaker looks at his younger brother killed by a car: 鈥淣o poppy bruise, the聽bumper knocked him clear./A four-foot box, a foot for every year.鈥

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We read only one book, The Norton Anthology of Poetry, skipping between eras, styles, conversations, gifts and secrets. Heaney had it memorised, quoting or misquoting (and improving?) lines from Beowulf to Elizabeth Bishop.

In his own constellation of favourite poems 鈥 by Dante, Robert Lowell, Zbigniew Herbert, William Carleton, Wilfred Owen 鈥損ersonal impulses clash with the needs of politically responsive art. They take risks that Irish poets face. Over this group hovered Osip Mandelstam; his witty satire, 鈥渢he Kremlin Mountaineer鈥 got him sent to Siberia.

Heaney grew restive with poems of droll satire, urban fatigue, ketchup-and-baloney family horrors, reflexive poems that punch at shadows. He warned us not to settle for 鈥渟tuff just written in lines鈥. But who knew what sources we would use? 鈥淐ross your roots with your reading.鈥

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He was the most admired teacher no one could imitate. The multiple displacements of culture, history and word-hoard left us admiring him, but looking to books and to ourselves for models. Does the best teacher produce students unlike him?

One outsider, Jane Brox, came from Nantucket, a pastry chef. Margaret Mead鈥檚 daughter, Mary Catherine Bateson, sat in. Both have produced terrific memoirs; neither sounds like Heaney. Nor do the Irish poets Paul Muldoon or Sin茅ad Morrissey exactly follow him. Yet Heaney anchors the poetry canon in several countries, and hundreds of poets know him simply as 鈥淪eamus鈥.

During a conference in his office Time magazine calls. He pronounces his name for them; next week their article gets it wrong. He聽attends many poetry readings 鈥 the audiences have come because he will introduce the poets. In restaurants, he chooses a small back table so he can finish a meal. In his apartment the phone is always ringing 鈥 he doesn鈥檛 know he can unplug it, and sits there typing out with two fingers the poem Alphabets, which he鈥檒l read at a ceremony. The ceiling of his bathroom has fallen in, chunks of plaster are piled in the tub. He鈥檚 got about 10聽minutes to spare, still damp-faced, bent in concentration as he finishes the poem, 鈥渓etter by strange letter鈥.

Someday, when 鈥淟ate 20th Century American Poetry鈥 is taught, we will trace how Boston, once home to local sages Emerson and Longfellow, then needed to import great writers from everywhere but New England: Joseph Brodsky, Derek Walcott, Saul Bellow, Robert Pinsky, Geoffrey Hill, Elie Wiesel, Christopher Ricks, and Heaney.

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Which of them made Yeats鈥 choice, life or work? Brodsky and Walcott produced 鈥渁 trail of tears鈥. Seamus Heaney鈥檚 generosity, in his poems and his life, leaves a quiet answer.

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