Boss Cupid: Poems

Boss Cupid: Poems

by Thom Gunn
Boss Cupid: Poems

Boss Cupid: Poems

by Thom Gunn

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Overview

A great poet's freshest, most provocative book.

He dreams at the center of a closed system,
Like the prison system, or a system of love,
Where folktale, recipe, and household custom
Refer back to the maze that they are of.
--from "A System: PCP, or Angel Dust"

Taste and appetite are contraposed in Boss Cupid, the twelfth book of poems by the quintessential San Francisco poet, who is also the quintessential craftsman and quintessentially a love poet, though not of quintessential love.Variations on how we are ruled by our desires, these poems make a startling and eloquent gloss on wanton want, moving freely from the story of King David and Bathsheba to Arthur Rimbaud's diet to the tastes of Jeffrey Dahmer. As warm and intelligent as it is ribald and cunning, this collection of Thom Gunn's is his richest yet.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780374706050
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publication date: 04/01/2007
Sold by: Macmillan
Format: eBook
Pages: 128
File size: 915 KB

About the Author

Thom Gunn, born in 1929, has received many awards, most recently a Lila Acheson Wallace/Reader's Digest Fellowship and a MacArthur Fellowship. His works include The Man with Night Sweats and Collected Poems.


Thom Gunn (1929–2004) was educated at Cambridge University and wrote his first collection of poems, Fighting Terms (1954), while he was still an undergraduate. He moved to Northern California in 1954 and taught at American universities until his death. His last collection was Boss Cupid (FSG, 2000).

Read an Excerpt

Boss Cupid


By Thom Gunn

Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Copyright © 2000 Thom Gunn
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-374-70605-0



CHAPTER 1

    Duncan

    1
    When in his twenties a poetry's full strength
    Burst into voice as an unstopping flood,
    He let the divine prompting (come at length)
    Rushingly bear him any way it would
    And went on writing while the Ferry turned
    From San Francisco, back from Berkeley too,
    And back again, and back again. He learned
    You add to, you don't cancel what you do.

    Between the notebook-margins his pen travelled,
    His own lines carrying him in a new mode
    To ports in which past purposes unravelled.
    So that, as on the Ferry Line he rode,
    Whatever his first plans that night had been,
    The energy that rose from their confusion
    Became the changing passage lived within
    While the pen wrote, and looked beyond conclusion.

    2
    Forty years later, and both kidneys gone;
    Every eight hours, home dialysis;
    The habit of his restlessness stayed on
    Exhausting him with his responsiveness.
    After the circulations of one day
    In which he taught a three-hour seminar
    Then gave a reading clear across the Bay,
    And while returning from it to the car
    With plunging hovering tread tired and unsteady
    Down Wheeler steps, he faltered and he fell
    —Fell he said later, as if I stood ready,
    "Into the strong arms of Thom Gunn."

    Well well,
    The image comic, as I might have known,
    And generous, but it turned things round to myth:
    He fell across the white steps there alone,
    Though it was me indeed that he was with.

    I hadn't caught him, hadn't seen in time,
    And picked him up where he had softly dropped,
    A pillow full of feathers. Was it a rime
    He later sought, in which he might adopt
    The role of H.D., broken-hipped and old,
    Who, as she moved off from the reading-stand,
    Had stumbled on the platform but was held
    And steadied by another poet's hand?

    He was now a posthumous poet, I have said
    (For since his illness he had not composed),
    In sight of a conclusion, whose great dread
    Was closure,
    his life soon to be enclosed
    Like the sparrow's flight above the feasting friends,
    Briefly revealed where its breast caught their light,
    Beneath the long roof, between open ends,
    Themselves the margins of unchanging night.


    The Antagonism
    to Helena Shire

    The Makers did not make
    The muddy winter hardening to privation,
    Or cholera in the keep, or frost's long ache
    Afflicting every mortal nation
    From lord to villagers in their fading dyes
    —Those who like oxen strained
    On stony clearings of the ground
    From church to sties.

    They sought an utterance,
    Or sunshine soluble in institution,
    An orthodoxy justified, at once
    The dream and dreamer warmed in fusion,
    As in the great Rose Window, pieced from duty,
    Where through Christ's crimson, sun
    Shines on your clothes till they take on
    Value and beauty.

    But carved on a high beam
    Far in the vault from the official version
    Gape gnarled un Christian heads out of whom stream
    Long stems of contrary assertion,
    Shaped leaf ridging their scalps in place of hair
.
    Their origins lost to sight,
    As they are too, cast out from light.

    They should despair.

    What stays for its own sake,
    Occulted in the dark, may slip an ending,
    Recalcitrant, and strengthened by the ache
    Of winter not for the transcending.

    Ice and snow pile the gables of the roof
    Within whose shade they hold,
    Intimate with its slaty cold,
    To Christ aloof.


    A Home

    Raised, he said, not at home but in a Home.

    Bare of associations, words like bed,
    Breakfast
and birthday hard eternal forms
    As standardized as workbench in the shop
    Or regulation metal bunk, with edges On which you bark your shins         because it's     there.

    Bare of associations.
    Between the boys
    Contact, not loose, not free, consisting mainly
    In the wrestling down of slave by slave. Call this
    The economy of bruises: threats of worse
    Pin you in place, for more convenient handling.
    And nothing occurs casually but dirt.

    So when a big boy slips you a comic book
    Because his heart is big, no other reason,
    His unfit action organizes time.

    It organizes time through revelation
    Of an old prophecy preserved in fragments
    Among the boys, a corrupt oral tradition
    Concerning the advent of the affections: for
    They will be born, and live and prosper too,
    Before their inevitable martyrdom.
    Your mind starts to prepare a place for them:

    And it delights in the cool new-found ease
    With which it slips the habitual weary tautness
    To enter certain unmapped borderlands.

    Waking early
    in the breathing room of beds
    To thin unsupervised light, a sanctuary,
    You glimpse at last a measure of the future
    In which you will seek out similar times
    Between times, places between places, thresholds
    And fire escapes, buses and laundromats,
    To tell in a voice guarded and level, "I
    Was raised in a Home," as if it were all over
    And the quotidian horror had been mastered.


    My Mother's Pride

    She dramatized herself
    Without thought of the dangers.
    But "Never pay attention," she said,
    "To the opinions of strangers."

    And when I stole from a counter,
    "You wouldn't accept a present
    From a tradesman." But I think I might have:
    I had the greed of a peasant.

    She was proud of her ruthless wit
    And the smallest ears in London.
    "Only conceited children are shy."
    I am made by her, and undone.


    The Gas-poker

    Forty-eight years ago
    —Can it be forty-eight
    Since then?—they forced the door
    Which she had barricaded
    With a full bureau's weight
    Lest anyone find, as they did,
    What she had blocked it for.

    She had blocked the doorway so,
    To keep the children out.
    In her red dressing-gown
    She wrote notes, all night busy
    Pushing the things about,
    Thinking till she was dizzy,
    Before she had lain down.
    The children went to and fro
    On the harsh winter lawn
    Repeating their lament,
    A burden, to each other
    In the December dawn,
    Elder and younger brother,
    Till they knew what it meant.

    Knew all there was to know.
    Coming back off the grass
    To the room of her release,
    They who had been her treasures
    Knew to turn off the gas,
    Take the appropriate measures,
    Telephone the police.

    One image from the flow
    Sticks in the stubborn mind:
    A sort of backwards flute.
    The poker that she held up
    Breathed from the holes aligned
    Into her mouth till, filled up
    By its music, she was mute.


    A Young Novelist

    whose first book was published in the same week that his lover         died


    You might say a whole life led up to it,
    A novel's publication—instances
    Gathered and finished, blurbed and jacketed.
    You might say also the same life had led
    The same week to another rounding off
    —Another body of live instances
    Rendered succinct, ash in a plastic sack
    Tied off severely, obited and let go,
    Let go. He lost the wrestler with the smile
    Who pinned him to the mat of love for ever,
    He' hoped.
    He doesn't know which way to turn;
    Each stroke of fortune will infect the other;
    Each is a thought of terrible unrest.

    Once on his way to school a schoolboy surfaced
    From all of loss to one cold London street
    And noticed minute leaves, they were soft points,
    Virgin-green, newly eased out of black twigs,
    And didn't know, really, what to make of them;
    Then turning back to it found he no longer
    Knew what to make of the other thing, despair.


    In the Post Office

    Saw someone yesterday looked like you did,
    Being short with long blond hair, a sturdy kid
    Ahead of me in line. I gazed and gazed
    At his good back, feeling again, amazed,
    That almost envious sexual tension which
    Rubbing at made the greater, like an itch,
    An itch to steal or otherwise possess
    The brilliant restive charm, the boyishness
    That half-aware—and not aware enough—
    Of what it did, eluded to hold off
    The very push of interest it begot,
    As if you'd been a tease, though you were not.
    I hadn't felt it roused, to tell the truth,
    In several years, that old man's greed for youth,
    Like Pelias's that boiled him to a soup,
    Not since I'd had the sense to cover up
    My own particular seething can of worms,
    And settle for a friendship on your terms.

    Meanwhile I had to look: his errand done,
    Without a glance at me or anyone,
    The kid unlocked his bicycle outside,
    Shrugging a backpack on. I watched him ride
    Down 18th Street, rising above the saddle
    For the long plunge he made with every pedal,
    Expending far more energy than needed.
    If only I could do whatever he did,
    With him or as a part of him, if I
    Could creep into his armpit like a fly,
    Or like a crab cling to his golden crotch,
    Instead of having to stand back and watch.
    Oh complicated fantasy of intrusion
    On that young sweaty body. My confusion
    Led me at length to recollections of
    Another's envy and his confused love.

    That Fall after you died I went again
    To where I had visited you in your pain
    But this time for your—friend, roommate, or wooer?
    I seek a neutral term where I'm unsure.
    He lay there now. Figuring she knew best,
    I came by at his mother's phoned request
    To pick up one of your remembrances,
    A piece of stained-glass you had made, now his,
    I did not even remember, far less want.
    To him I felt, likewise, indifferent.

    "You can come in now," said the friend-as-nurse.
    I did, and found him altered for the worse.
    But when he saw me sitting by his bed,
    He would not speak, and turned away his head.
    I had not known he hated me until
    He hated me this much, hated me still.
    I thought that we had shared you more or less,
    As if we shared what no one might possess,
    Since in a net we sought to hold the wind.
    There he lay on the pillow, mortally thinned,
    Weaker than water, yet his gesture proving
    As steady as an undertow. Unmoving
    In the sustained though slight aversion, grim
    In wordlessness. Nothing deflected him,
    Nothing I did and nothing I could say.
    And so I left. I heard he died next day.

    I have imagined that he still could taste
    That bitterness and anger to the last,
    Against the roles he saw me in because
    He had to: of victor, as he thought I was,
    Of heir, as to the cherished property
    His mother—who knows why?—was giving me,
    And of survivor, as I am indeed,
    Recording so that I may later read
    Of what has happened, whether between sheets,
    Or in post offices, or on the streets.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Boss Cupid by Thom Gunn. Copyright © 2000 Thom Gunn. Excerpted by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

1,
Duncan,
The Antagonism,
A Home,
My Mother's Pride,
The Gas-poker,
A Young Novelist,
In the Post Office,
Postscript: The Panel,
The Butcher's Son,
An Operation,
The Problem,
Arethusa Saved,
Arethusa Raped,
Arachne,
Enough,
Cat Island,
Nights with the Speed Bros,
A System,
Sequel,
Shit,
The Dump,
Jokes, etc,
Saturday Night,
American Boy,
Painting by Vuillard,
2,
GOSSIP,
Famous Friends,
A GI in 1943,
Front Bar of the Lone Star,
To Donald Davie in Heaven,
A Los Angeles Childhood,
The Artist as an Old Man,
"The little cousin dashed in",
Classics,
"7 a.m. in the bar",
Hi,
Coffee on Cole,
Letters from Manhattan,
"Save the word",
Convergence,
Blues for the New Year, 1997,
Aubade,
The Search,
Office Hours,
"Stories of bar-fights",
"First saw him",
3,
Troubadour,
Coffee Shop,
Rapallo,
In Trust,
To Cupid,
Front Door Man,
A Wood near Athens,
First Song,
Dancing David,
Acknowledgements and Notes,

Interviews

Cupid as Bully: A Talk with Thom Gunn

Bathhouse poems were a pretty risky way to start a poetry career when Thom Gunn first began publishing. In the 1950s, Gunn's sensual, vividly detailed poems about love and homosexual desire -- poems widely considered among the best verse of our time -- delved into subject matter editors felt free to reject on "moral" grounds. The decades have proved that Gunn was no publicity-seeking sensationalist but a masterful poet committed to form and deeply involved in bringing 18th- and 19th-century French influences into English. With the years, Gunn's work has become more vibrant, openly funny sometimes, and cuttingly precise in its observation. Gunn has always been interested in visual detail, and even coauthored a book of poems with his photographer brother, Ander, titled Positives, which traces the arc of life through photographs, elegantly pairing poems to pictures. Writing about a child or a bent, elderly woman in those photographs, Gunn is ever alert to feelings of love, power, and helplessness -- all related to his major repeating theme of desire as the core of humanity. A Briton who moved to California to join his lover, Gunn spent many years teaching at Berkeley and recently retired. Along the way, he's won numerous awards, including the MacArthur Fellowship and a Lila Acheson Wallace prize. But the America he lives in now, the America he has written about so touchingly in many of his 12 books of poems, is not the America he first moved to. Gay literature is a thriving category, and there are many outstanding gay poets actively publishing poems. The then-shocking moments in Gunn's work no longer create waves, and now, the poems' beauty can stand on its own terms. But Gunn still loves his initial subject matter. He can't stay away from it. His latest volume, Boss Cupid, details how we are ruled by desire. As Gunn says, he is interested in "desire as a bully." These poems, once again far from complacent, roamed from David and Bathsheba to Jeffrey Dahmer, with pit stops for attractive guys in the post office. The writing is taut, with constant attention to form. Every line is in place. In our exclusive interview, contributing editor Aviya Kushner talks with Gunn about love, desire, and a career record of being true to oneself -- no matter what society may say.

Barnes & Noble.com: Your most recent book, Boss Cupid, is all about desire. Why is desire so fascinating a subject for you, and why have you kept writing about it?

Thom Gunn: It's one of the principal human preoccupations -- and it certainly has been for me. At least, it has been for 60 years. One of the greatest influences on me have been the 18th- and 19th-century French novelists -- Laclos, Stendhal, Flaubert, and Proust. They've influenced me much more than the ancients. They explore the subject of love and its contradictions, and the idea that Cupid, the god of love, is a bully. He can make us profoundly uncomfortable.

B&N.com: What about your subject matter -- is it easier now to write about gay topics? Tell me a bit about how things have changed since you started writing.

TG: It has opened up a lot. Edmund White has a theory that once my generation and his were enabled to write freely about queer love, we were given an enormous amount of subject matter. It's very hard to imagine now the constrictions on writing about same-sex love in the 1950s, when I got started. You didn't write about same-sex love -- you wouldn't have been published. In 1944, for example, Robert Duncan, the San Francisco poet (who is memorialized in the poem "Duncan" in Boss Cupid) wrote an essay for a periodical called Politics about homosexuality. It wasn't that unusual in its content, but what was unusual was that Duncan said he was a homosexual. And a periodical run by John Crowe Ransom that had accepted Duncan's poems de-accepted them as a result. So things have changed enormously.

B&N.com: And yet Cupid is still boss. Where did the title come from?

TG: The title drew it together. I couldn't think what to call the book, and suddenly I realized that one of the references in the book would be a great title.

B&N.com: I'm interested in some of your previous work, too. In one of the poems in Positives, you write, "Youth is power." Well, what does a poet who wrote that do when he gets older?

TG: I'm not suggesting it as an absolute constant statement. Youth in this instance can be power, but I'm not offering it as a constant truth. For him, it is (the boy in the photograph). He's full of potential -- he's bathing in it. What is getting older? It's getting tired.

B&N.com: On the flip side, I'm curious about what you meant in an early poem about childhood, where you wrote "there is pleasure in reaching/a painful conclusion/with a tooth or with a thought." What is the pleasure, exactly?

TG: It can be painful when a new tooth comes through. It's a painful pleasure, and the mix of pleasure and pain is working something out.

B&N.com: You moved to California in 1954 and have stayed since. How has living in the United States affected your work?

TG: There's no controlled experiment to know what Thom Gunn would have been like had he stayed. Certainly the subject matter has been very much American, since my experience has been American.

B&N.com: In "Duncan," the opening poem in Boss Cupid, you write, "He learned you add to, you don't cancel what you do." Is that how you work?

TG: Duncan didn't believe in revision, he believed in adding. Once I showed him a poem, and then I showed him the same poem some weeks later, revised with a different ending. And he said if he were me he'd put in both endings. That line in the poem "Duncan" refers to the way he worked. He was a wonderful man. We were friends, and as a poet he had a very different following from me, but we were friends.

B&N.com: You've mentioned that you love Baudelaire. What is it about Baudelaire's work that you particularly admire?

TG: Proust pointed out that certain lines in Baudelaire could have been written by Racine. They were so classical in their balance, and the fact that he was able to balance the classical and the modern city -- that's magnificent. The fact that he was able to use the chaste style of Racine to describe the unchaste side of the city -- that's remarkable.

B&N.com: Okay, your wish is granted and you can pick your readers. Can you describe your ideal reader?

TG: My ideal reader would be rather like myself at the age of 21 or so. I don't expect special knowledge from him. I wouldn't expect my poetry to be the first thing the person picked up. I wouldn't need to give any direction.

B&N.com: But if you could offer advice to readers, what would it be?

TG: Read aloud. You should hear it. All poetry needs to be heard.

B&N.com: And what's next for you?

TG: I don't know. Death?! I mean, I'm 70. I'm having a good time being retired. You can get drunk in the middle of the day. I enjoyed teaching and I thought I'd miss it, but I don't miss it. There was always that sense of mild panic before giving a lecture, and any worthwhile teacher is going to worry. I do certainly miss the contact with young people, because they ask elementary questions. They keep you from becoming complacent.

Contributing editor Aviya Kushner is the poetry editor of Neworld Magazine and has served as poetry coordinator for AGNI Magazine. Her writing on poetry has appeared in The Harvard Review and The Boston Phoenix, and her essays on individual poems have been published in Poetry for Students, the college textbook on poetry. She has given readings of her own work throughout the United States and can be reached at AviyaK@aol.com.

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