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Unread 11-14-2010, 03:46 PM
Tim Murphy Tim Murphy is offline
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Default Remembering Michael

Remembering Michael

At the eighth Conference on Form and Narrative at West Chester, I saw a fellow smaller than I, dressed in a black leather jacket, ruinously handsome in the way that a few men nearing fifty can be. I walked up to admire him and was astonished to learn that he was Michael Donaghy, whose work I knew from a broadsheet published by Acumen in Britain. I asked what had brought him across the Atlantic, and he told me “I came to meet Dick Davis, Sam Gwynn and you.”
That night Michael would recite brilliantly to the assembly, but even many rows back in the auditorium, Alan and I could see that the poet looked deathly pale. Afterward we found our host Michael Peich with Donaghy in the lobby. They were about to leave for the hospital. Donaghy had suffered something worse than an attack of stage fright. His cardiac arhythmia was acting up—despite his youthful looks, the poet was prematurely afflicted with ill-health. But arhythmia affected only Michael’s heart, not his verse:

The Bacchae

Look out, Slim, these girls are trouble.
You dance with them they dance you back.
They talk it broad but they want it subtle
and you got too much mouth for that.
Their secret groove’s their sacred grove --
not clever not ever, nor loud, nor flaunt.
I know you, Slim, you’re a jerk for love.
The way you talk is the what you want.
You want numbers. You want names.
You want to cheat at rouge et noir.
But these are initiated dames --
the how they move is the what they are.

Michael’s verse was jazzy, it was sexy. He loved to jar people. Like Greg Williamson, he was an inveterate mixer of diction. His mind channel-surfed the world. He would hear a song, see a woman, read of ancient Greece—and all these disparate things would combine in a poem. “Initiated dames” indeed.

Donaghy spent his lifetime in three great cities: New York, Chicago and London. In the latter, he achieved wide recognition for his verse, winning major prizes for both of his collections. A skilled flautist and penny whistler, he augmented his miserable earnings from teaching and poetry by playing traditional Irish music with a variety of bands. He certainly carried that musical gift into his poetry.

Eight months after I met Michael at West Chester, we spent some time together in London, where I’d gone to launch my second collection, Very Far North, for Waywiser Press. Michael was teaching night classes in creative writing for City University of London. I recited poetry to his pupils, then accompanied them to a nearby pub for a round of ale. We were both on and off the wagon, but Michael’s idea of sobriety did not involve desisting from marijuana and cocaine, which I had abjured twenty years earlier.

Michael’s poems are full of violence, vodka, drugs, and melodrama. He assumed unpredictable voices—one could never tell whether his personae were imaginative projections or shards of self. He also invoked his Catholic upbringing in bizarre ways. Religious imagery is everywhere in his poetry. A tremendous spiritual tension drove his work, and his life. Charles Martin’s great title “For a Child of Seven, Taken by the Jesuits,” would be perfect for the yet-unseen Collected Poems of Donaghy.

Co-Pilot

He leadeth me in the paths of righteousness,
Sitting on my shoulder like a pirate’s parrot,
Whispering the Decalogue like a tiny Charlton Heston.
Tch, he goes. Tch Tch. He boreth me spitless.
Tonight I need a party with a bottomless punchbowl
Brimming cool vodka to the lip of the horizon.
I’ll yank him from his perch and hold him under
Until the bubbles stop.

Michael couldn’t kill the God perched on his shoulder, but death found him suddenly last fall, during the happiest period of his life, when he had married and fathered at last. He had already anticipated and rehearsed his own end in an eerie poem called ‘The Turning.’ .

The Turning

If anyone asks you how I died, say this:
The angel of death came in the form of a moth
And landed on the lute I was repairing.
I closed up shop
And left the village on the quietest night of summer,
The summer of my thirtieth year,
And went with her up through the thorn forest.
Tell them I heard yarrow stalks snapping beneath my feet
And heard a dog bark far off, far off.
That’s all I saw or heard,
Apart from the angel at ankle level leading me,
Until we got above the treeline and I turned
To look for the last time on the lights of home.

That’s when she started singing.
It’s written that the voice of the god of Israel
Was the voice of many waters.
But this was the sound of trees growing,
The noise of a pond thrown into a stone.

When I turned from the lights below to watch her sing,
I found the angel changed from moth to woman,
Singing inhuman intervals through her human throat,
The notes at impossible angles justified.

If you understand, friend, explain to them
So they pray for me. How could I go back?
How could I bear to hear the heart’s old triads--
Clatter of hooves, the closed gate clanging,
A match scratched toward a pipe--
How could I bear to hear my children cry?

I found a rock that had the kind of heft
We weigh the world against
And brought it down fast against my forehead
Again, again, until blood drenched my chest
And I was safe and real forever.

Since my return to the Catholic faith, I have prayed for Michael’s soul every morning and evening—the response he asked in ‘The Turning.’ Through this disturbing work I hear echoes of C. S. Lewis’ Perelandra Trilogy, where the Oyeresu (archangels) glimmer at impossible angles to the worlds they rule. I surmise Michael also had Stevens’ Key West in mind. “The lights of the fishing boats at anchor there” prefigure the lights of the village seen for the last time by the young luthier as his death angel sings.

Above all, I hear the Bible, “the voice of a great multitude, and as the voice of many waters, and as the voice of mighty thunderings, saying Alleluia.” (Revelations, 19:6) Surely that is a source of Michael’s unerring sense for lineation, something one finds so rarely in the fractured prose that generally passes for free verse. Donaghy is further proof of what R. P. Warren told me at Yale, and might also have told Michael in the Green Room of the West Side Y, when they met there in 1974: “Boy, if you want to write free verse, you must first learn to write formal verse.”

The morning after his collapse at West Chester, Michael ridiculed the episode as “a gypsy wedding rioting in my heart.” The previous day he had described his early job as a doorman in New York: “I kept my Hopkins hidden in my hat.” Michael just spoke in perfect pentameter, and I tried for several years to write a poem about him. After his premature death, the unfinished project took on real urgency.

The Doorman
i.m. Michael Donaghy

You kept your Hopkins hidden in your hat
to pass time when gypsy cabs were weaving.
A matron in whose presence hats came off
spotted the poet you were forced to doff
and whisked you to her gracious East Side flat
where thirty stories up
Margaret are you grieving
over Goldengrove unleaving?
her voice was tea poured in a china cup.
She bought you tickets to the ‘Y,’ that hall
where Eliot intoned
his Four Quartets, where Frost said Mending Wall,
and Dylan Thomas sang his lines half-stoned.

Busking for the supper on your plate,
you married Maddy late
as gypsy weddings rioted in your heart,
that tympanum where all our meters start.
A frail expatriate,
you wowed the ‘Y.’ Your patroness returned
to hear firsthand how much her guest had learned.
She watched you springing for the microphone
to read without a text,
master of pacing, phrasing, pitch and tone.
Pity the poor bastard who went next,
yet even he is grieving
your prematurely leaving
a stage so few could ever wholly own.

It is a great grief that the angel of death took Michael in his fiftieth year; but grace a Dieu, he graced this world for two decades beyond the young luthier’s age before his turning. The body of work Michael left us, with its “inhuman intervals,” is “safe and real forever.”

There was an outpouring of sorrow after Michael’s death. Our friend Katy Evans-Bush, Michael’s student and my colleague at the Eratosphere, provided me links to the London paper where condolences were offered. There were some memorable things said by minstrels and poets. Within days of the tragedy Paul Lake composed this reflection.

The Water Glass

When water poised above the rim,
He noted it was surface tension
That held the audience and him
Spellbound. That night, the whole convention
Trembled on edge till Michael quipped,
“What could a surface be tense about?”
And laughter broke like water. Then
He made a splash when he passed out.
The doctors looking at his chart
Were puzzled by the tinny tunes
His organs made, but Michael felt
“A gypsy wedding in my heart,”
And we all laughed. Now it’s as if
With flute and whistle, he’s danced off
To join that gypsy caravan
In noisy mirth, as dark drips down
Night’s tent, beyond the edge of town.

After Alan Sullivan came to my rescue and helped me finish The Doorman, Mister Gwynn weighed in with this:

For M. D.

September 16, 2004

Younger than I, perhaps the braver man
Or just the bigger fool, you kept on going
Down the fast track. Wired and wound tight, you ran
Circles around us all, Mike, surely knowing
Someday we'd grant you, browsing through your pages,
The same damned envious love we have for those
Who've spoiled us with their terse and primal rages,
Making our subtlest stanzas sound like prose.

Still, it's a lovely night, and these regrets
Shouldn't keep us from one toast, you'd agree.
I pull the cork, reach for the cigarettes,
And tilt one for you, Michael Donaghy,
Who spoke your lines like offerings to the gods,
Cheating at nothing, nothing but the odds.

Paul and I were born three years before Michael, and Sam three years before us. Only Michael died at fifty. We are being given time to complete our work, time that was denied Mikey. Note Sam’s words, “offerings to the gods.” In the last three days I have earned Michael a plenary indulgence which entails a spiritual exercize that I have reduced to verse.

The Dispensation

My dear Lord, today is All Saints’ Day,
and the Church offers plenary indulgence
to those who attend High Mass, who tend the graves
of their forebears and confess their grievous sins.
A mercy to be claimed or given away,
it is my gift to Michael Donaghy.


--This chapter from my forthcoming prosimetrum, Requited, was published in The Alabama Literary Review, Spring, 2007

Last edited by Tim Murphy; 11-14-2010 at 03:55 PM.
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  #2  
Unread 11-14-2010, 04:07 PM
Duncan Gillies MacLaurin's Avatar
Duncan Gillies MacLaurin Duncan Gillies MacLaurin is offline
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Very nice, Tim! Many thanks!

Duncan
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  #3  
Unread 11-16-2010, 12:22 AM
Dan Breene Dan Breene is offline
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You're a grand man Tim to spend such time and effort on a friend and fellow poet. Well done.
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Unread 11-16-2010, 12:09 PM
Tim Murphy Tim Murphy is offline
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Dan and Duncan, I fell head over heels in love with Mikey, as he did with me. Of course it was absolutely platonic, but I have prayed for him every night since my return to the Church, I really did go through the exacting requirements for a plenary indulgence for my friend, even though I have no faith in its efficacy. We were from different worlds, but we had so much in common, Irish music, haunted Catholicism, extraordinary memories, our weakness for the drink which I have survived and he didn't, a flair for performance. We joked that I was the poet of the nineteenth century, and he of the twenty-first; and here I sit without him in the twenty-first. It's a loss from which I shall never recover.
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Unread 11-16-2010, 12:14 PM
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Maryann Corbett Maryann Corbett is offline
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Yes, thanks, Tim. And I've found a site that seems to have a scan of the David Mason article from The Dark Horse--terrible scan quality, but something rather than nothing. Let's see if this works: The Song is Drowned....
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Unread 11-16-2010, 03:04 PM
Tim Murphy Tim Murphy is offline
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I long since discarded from my ouevre, which Alan and I always jokingly called my "Admitted Poems," that little blank verse at the conclusion of the afore essay for Michael. But although I have about as much faith in the efficacy of my prayer as I do in the Easter Bunny, it's like Pascal's Wager, it can't hurt. So I have now earned plenary indulgences six years in a row. Here are four of them, and this time, I think Mikey's little poem will last on the shoulders of its brothers:

Four Dispensations

I.
My dear Lord, today is All Souls’ Day,
and the Church offers plenary indulgence
to those who attend High Mass, who tend the graves
of their forebears and confess their grievous sins.
A mercy to be claimed or given away,
it is my gift to Michael Donaghy.

II.
My dear Lord, today is All Souls’ Day,
and I pray for the soul of David Miller
whose son heard my confession just last night.
Today I shall attend my father’s grave,
and I’ll complete a plenary indulgence
for a farmer who treated me like a son.

III.
My dear Lord, today is All Souls’ Day,
and I pray for the soul of my late father
at whose grave I bury the AA medal
which marks nine months of my sobriety.
Let him forgive me all my indiscretions,
and Lord, let him behold your countenance.

IV.
My dear Lord, today is All Souls’ Day.
I hold a box of ashes in my lap,
Alan’s. I hope he needs no prayers from me,
but I from him? That is another matter.
His last words to my face were an act of mercy:
“Know when I die, that we are reconciled.”
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Unread 11-16-2010, 07:04 PM
Katy Evans-Bush Katy Evans-Bush is offline
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Maryann, I just don't know how you find these links! You must know some kind of Internet Bypassing Code or something. Amazing.
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