Lawrence Hall, HSG
Let Us Proceed to Sonnet 32
Cf. Shakespeare, Sonnet 31
There is a reason why
Boris Pasternak
Did not recite Shakespeare’s
Sonnet 31
To the Soviet Writers’ Conference
in ’37 -
It’s a mess
Newspaper columns not published in any newspaper (and there's probably a reason for that)
Lawrence Hall, HSG
Let Us Proceed to Sonnet 32
Cf. Shakespeare, Sonnet 31
There is a reason why
Boris Pasternak
Did not recite Shakespeare’s
Sonnet 31
To the Soviet Writers’ Conference
in ’37 -
It’s a mess
Lawrence Hall, HSG
While Clenching Their Fisties
Old men do not now argue politics
At the coffee table in the grocery store
Old men, like some university students
Simply say what they are ordered to say
By voices bellowing from Orwellian telescreens
While clenching their Trumpy-grumpy fisties
Lawrence Hall, HSG
When to the Sessions of Sweet, Noisy
Thought
Cf. Shakespeare,
Sonnet 30
I don’t
need to summon up remembrances
They
simply wander in uninvited
In death
just as they did in life, good friends
To sit together
with our jokes, our drinks, our pipes
We still
argue with each other, our minds
So
familiar after all those happy years
Thesis,
antithesis, and Dunhill tobacco
Ice cubes
rattling in the soft summer dusk
Lewis and
Tolkien show up late, stern Milton too
Remembrances?
Not really – we are forever here
In Moscow, 1937, during the annual
Soviet writers’ congress—a time of severe purges—Pasternak took a courageous
stand. Amidst the dull, regime-prescribed speeches praising Leninist-Stalinism,
he did something extraordinary. He recited Sonnet 30 by William
Shakespeare:
“When to the sessions of sweet silent
thought,
I summon up remembrance of things past,
I sigh the lack of many a thing I sought,
And with old woes new wail my dear times’ waste.”
The impact was profound. All two
thousand writers in the hall rose to their feet, joining Pasternak in this
act of defiance. The number “30” became a symbol of resistance, a testament
to the enduring power of poetry and memory.
Lawrence Hall, HSG
Those Who Straddle the Temple Walls
“Choose you this day whom you will serve”
-Joshua 24:15
For those who are desperate to be accepted as cool –
You cannot straddle the walls of the holy Temple
You cannot straddle the barbed wire of Auschwitz
You cannot straddle the banks of the Red Sea
You cannot choose two sides and call them one
Since the Hitler time there have not been two sides
You cannot wear both the tallit and the snakeskin
You cannot break bread with your grinning executioners
You cannot dance to circled drums and bullhorn chants
You cannot forswear your family murdered in the gas chambers
Since the burning time there have not been two sides
He who chooses the fashionable, the clever, the cool
Chooses to be a kapo, a funktionshaftling
His people will despise him, so too his masters
(Who in the end will kill him in his shame)
And his memory will be a curse, not a blessing
But you –
Choose bravely so that your name will be written in The Book
And written in the hearts of your proud descendants
Lawrence Hall, HSG
When
Fortune and Men’s Eyes are in Disgrace
Cf.
Shakespeare, Sonnet 29
A good thing with being disgraced in men’s eyes
Is that that mostly they don’t notice you at all
As a nobody you are but a shadow at best
Or an accessory in their empty scenes
If they don’t notice you, then you are not disgraced
And you have better things to do anyway:
Children to raise, songs to sing, books to write
Each day’s honest labor at your honest craft
The resolution is
That some men might be disgraced in your eyes
That is, if you choose to notice them at all
Lawrence Hall, HSG
And Why is There a Police Car in Your Driveway?
Cf. Shakespeare, Sonnet 28
The days are a mess and so are the nights
Each day is burdened with labors unrelenting
Toils industrial and toils emotional
Everyone seems to want a bite of you
At night the stresses follow you to bed:
The boss’s write-ups seem to poison the pillows
The unpaid bills, the clapped-out car, the fears
The children’s report cards, the broken washer
You give life your all – you work, you struggle, you strive -
And why is there a cop car in your drive?
Lawrence Hall, HSG
These Here So-Called Schools These Days
“Lead, Follow, or Get the H*** Out of the Way”
-a sign on the bulkhead in recruit
training
Those coffee-shop cynics
drowning in dejection:
Some of them wallow in existential
abjection
And some meet every hope
with an objection
Or with a sneering,
irrelevant deflection
But I did something other than b**** and moan
I voted in my local
school board election
Lawrence Hall Mhall46184@aol.com Dispatches for the Colonial Office May Our Children Live Long Enough to Invade Greenland ...