Happy Birthday, Mr President, hat Marilyn Monroe vor sechzig Jahren gesungen. Hat Emmylou Harris jemals für Jimmy Carter gesungen? Im Weißen Haus ist sie ja als sein Gast gewesen. Aber wenn niemand für ihn singt, gratulieren müssen wir heute schon: der ehemalige Präsident der USA Jimmy Carter wird heute achtundneunzig Jahre alt. Er war ein anderer Präsident als Donald Trump, er war ein Präsident, für den die Allman Brothers sangen. Und der Bob Dylan und Willie Nelson ins Weiße Haus einlud. Und für den John Wayne sagte: I have come here tonight to pay my respects to our 39th President, our new Commander-in-Chief and to wish you Godspeed, Sir, in the uncharted waters ahead. Starting tomorrow at high noon, all of our hopes and dreams go into that great house with you. For you have become our transition into the unknown tomorrows. And everyone is with you. I am privileged to be present and accounted for in this capitol of freedom to witness history as it happens … to watch a common man accept uncommon responsibilities he won 'fair and square' by stating his case to the American people … not by bloodshed, beheadings, and riots at the palace gates. I know I am considered a member of the opposition … the Loyal Opposition … accent on Loyal. I’d have it no other way. In conclusion, may I add my voice to the millions of others all over the world who wish you well, Mr. President. All we ask is that you preserve this … one Nation … under God … with liberty and justice for all. And we have no doubt you will, Sir.
Light Comes in Turkey Country
I know the forest on my farm
best at breaking day
when birdcalls seem to draw
the darkness back
that cages me.
The dim tree limbs
fragment the barely luminescent sky,
a metronomic whippoorwill
wakes the distant, lonely doves,
strangely wary when they call,
the ground and saplings come in view,
the pileated's crazy cry
is punctuated by its hammer blows on wood
and a barred owl wants to know
who cooks for me.
Distance takes the jagged edges off
the crows' more raucous sound
and then perhaps, perhaps,
a far-off gobbler's piercing call
ends all that reverie.
I move that way, very carefully.
I hardly breathe, and move that way.
1994 war sein Gedichtband Always a Reckoning and Other Poems erschienen. Er hatte sich dafür vorbereitet, wie er 2003 in einem Interview sagte: ten years ago, I wanted to write a book of poems. I approached with some temerity a couple of distinguished poets (Miller Williams and James Whitehead) at the University of Arkansas who took me under their wing, and I received the equivalent of a postgraduate course in poetry. Es ist ein sehr persönliches Buch mit Gedichten über seine Jugend und seine Familie geworden. Sein Buch A Full Life: Reflections at Ninety (2016) hat er seiner Frau Rosalynn gewidmet: To Rosalynn, who has kept my life full of love. Die hatte er 1994 in Always a Reckoning auch schon bedichtet:
Within a crowd, I'd hope her glance might be
for me, but I knew that she was shy, and wished
to be alone.
I'd pay to sit behind her, blind to what
was on the screen, and watch the image flicker
upon her hair.
I'd glow when her diminished voice would clear
the muddled thoughts, like lightning flashing in
a gloomy sky.
The nothing in my soul with her aloof
was changed to foolish fullness when she came
to be with me.
With shyness gone and hair caressed with gray,
her smile still makes the birds forget to sing
and me to hear their song.
for me, but I knew that she was shy, and wished
to be alone.
I'd pay to sit behind her, blind to what
was on the screen, and watch the image flicker
upon her hair.
I'd glow when her diminished voice would clear
the muddled thoughts, like lightning flashing in
a gloomy sky.
The nothing in my soul with her aloof
was changed to foolish fullness when she came
to be with me.
With shyness gone and hair caressed with gray,
her smile still makes the birds forget to sing
and me to hear their song.
She'd smile, and birds would feel that they no longer
had to sing, or it may be I failed
to hear their song.
had to sing, or it may be I failed
to hear their song.
Die vierundvierzig Gedichte in Always a Reckoning and Other Poems sind keine große Lyrik, sie sind stille, persönliche Lyrik. Manches ein wenig im Stil von Robert Frost, der 1961 bei Kennedys Inauguration ein Gedicht vortrug (bei Carters Gala gab es ein Gedicht von James Dickey), wie das Gedicht Some things I love:
Your enchantment in a lonely wood,
The fight and color of a rainbow trout,
My in-basket empty and a new good book,
Binoculars fixed on a strange new bird,
Sadie’s point, and a covey of quail,
The end of a six-mile run in the rain,
Blue slope, soft snow, fast run, no fall,
A dovetail joint without a gap,
Grandchildren coming in our front door,
The same ones leaving in a day or two,
And life, till what rhymes with breath
Takes me from all things I share with you
Michiko Kakutani ist eine umstrittene Kritikerin, Jonathan Franzen hat sie the stupidest person in New York City genannt. Sie schreibt seit fünf Jahren keine Kritiken mehr. Pieke Biermann kommentierte das im Deutschlandfunk so: Im Sommer 2017 war es soweit: Der personifizierte Schrecken des US-Literaturbetriebs trat ab. Über drei Jahrzehnte hatte Michiko Kakutani den Chefkritikerposten der „New York Times“ bekleidet – weniger Literaturpapst als Scharfrichter, pulitzerpreisgekrönt, mit rigoros scharfer Klinge und der Macht über Leben und Tod von – zumindest – literarischen Karrieren. Nur wenige, die mal „kakutanisiert“ worden waren, erholten sich davon und wetzten dann selbst die Messer, wie Jonathan Franzen, Philip Roth, Tom Wolfe, Norman Mailer und andere. Jimmy Carters Gedichtband kann man immer noch kaufen, seine Gedichte kann man immer noch lesen.
I hope this comment actually works.
AntwortenLöschenI have tried before but it hasn't worked...poor computer skills!
Anyway, just to say your blog is the one I check first every day...it really is one of the best on the Web, containing culture, fashion and politics.
I wish you would publish, in English...my German is only O Level standard...your Bremen memoir, it is a period which interests me, both your country and mine.
Best regards,
Mickc