In his Summa Lyrica, Grossman declares that “The poem has no other life than the relationships it facilitates, and these relationships reproduce the profoundest human covenant, which is the covenant of language through which they give and obtain the world simultaneously, and only obtain the world when they give” (Grossman 1992, p. 284). Under this covenant (and note how, like Stevens, Grossman appropriates religious terminology), the poet writes the poem and becomes “the person who has enacted the deed of presence” (Grossman 1992, p. 260). Like Stevens’ poet, who serves as an intermediary between people and their world, and between people and themselves, Grossman’s poet tries “to mediate a profounder, more gratifying, more magnanimous, more joyous sense of being toward persons in the world” (Grossman 1992, p. 21).
Unlike Stevens, however, Grossman does not see himself writing after the belief in God has been abandoned. As he puts it in the Introduction to How to Do Things with Tears, “The maxim of poetic thinking is: DO NOT BE CONTENT WITH AN IMAGINARY GOD” (Grossman 2001, p. xi). Grossman’s redemptive vision is dependent on his idiosyncratic understanding of Jewish identity, culture, history, and ritual,1 but his “maxim” is in some respects universal, for it grounds poetic thinking, making it a fundamental human act: “poetic thinking is the thinking without which thinking fails of significance” (Grossman 2001, p. 97). Grossman’s religious poetry is as uncanny as his poetic thinking; it is the result of a mythopoesis that combines sublime prophetic utterance with vernacular humor and folksiness:
God says to himself, “What shall I do NOW?”
And then he says to me, “Grossman, you are
the only Jew that is. It’s up to you.”
So I ask him, ‘What happened to the rest
of the Jews. Then God says, ‘Put out the cat.’
—O kid! What shall I do? It is still dark
but the sky lightens over the machinery.
It’s up to us. ONE is not enough.
(Grossman 2001, p. 26)
In these lines from “Epistola,” Grossman’s God (who is something of a wise guy, something of a schlemiel) depends on the poet, “the only Jew that is,” to help maintain the machinery of creation, since “ONE is not enough”—contradicting the most basic of Jewish prayers, the Shema (“Hear, oh Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is One”). In a longer poem, “Not all wanderers are lost,” “The God, before religion, / wept for himself, alone, among the sanctities.” But in a mutual relationship with humanity, “The Lord, Our God, teaches us how to do things / with tears” (Grossman 2001, p. 61), that is, “the common sadness of living and dying in the world” (Grossman 2001, p. xi). For the poet to enter into this redemptive project, an imaginary God is not enough.
The Poem as Scripture
“Do I wish myself, in the deepest unconscious or subconscious layers of my being, to be the founder of a new religion?” (H.D. 1956, p. 55). So asks H.D., reflecting on her analysis with Freud. Freud does not take H.D.’s wish altogether seriously, and H.D. never becomes a prophetess per se, but there is no doubt that a powerful religious impulse informs her later work, partly released by the very analysis that enables her to question her motives in relation to belief, creativity, and gender.2 These are bound up in one of the greatest sequences in modernist poetry, Trilogy. Robert Duncan calls Trilogy “a gospel of Poetry” (Duncan 2011, p. 76), meaning, on the one hand, that poetry contains, brings forward or enacts spiritual truth, and on the other hand, that poetry, as a scripture unto itself, is that truth. As a sacred text, Trilogy reclaims and revises the hermetic traditions in which H.D. was immersed throughout her life. What she calls “spiritual realism” in The Walls Do Not Fall requires a commitment to “substitute enchantment / for sentiment” (H.D. 1983, p. 537); through magical practice, poets must seek for occult truth without settling for mere personal expression. At a time of political and cultural crisis (the poem is written in London during the Blitz), H.D. insists that her colleagues “re-value / our secret hoard” of wisdom:
explicitly, we are told
it contains
for every scribe
which is instructed,
things new
and old.
(H.D. 1983, p. 538)
The poet-scribe rewrites the ancient traditions, and in doing so, prophetically reveals new truths. Poets are “bearers of the secret wisdom, / living remnant // of the inner band / of the sanctuaries initiate” (H.D. 1983, p. 517); their goddess is the Lady who “carries a book but it is not / the tome of the ancient wisdom, // the pages, I imagine, are the blank pages / of the unwritten volume of the new” (H.D. 1983, p. 570).
H.D.’s work anticipates more recent developments in the ongoing history of poetry and belief. Her understanding of poets as a “living remnant” conflates a biblical concept, the saving remnant of the righteous, with the hermetic concept of initiation into an select order, with special access to secret wisdom. In Trilogy, these ideas are sustained in tandem with an explicit modernism that celebrates “the unwritten volume of the new.” Here, “the new” is partly a matter of genre: Trilogy and the poems which follow in its wake are not revisionary modernist epics such as The Cantos, “A,” or The Maximus Poems. They are revisionary scripture, and their newness (which is also a return to a timeless gnosis) entails a rethinking of poetry’s relation to belief and to the sacred. As Peter O’Leary writes, “When I refer to [Robert] Duncan, H.D. or [Nathaniel] Mackey as religious poets, I do not mean they have religious aspirations outside of the poem. They devote themselves to the ‘orders’ of poetry, to the ‘trouble of the unbound reference’ (as Duncan calls it) with a religious fervor, because only in poetry do they find the revelation that gives order to creation and cosmos” (O’Leary 2002, p. 25). Duncan in Passages, Mackey in The Song of the Andoumboulou and “Mu,” Ronald Johnson in ARK, Lissa Wolsak in Lightsail, and Joseph Donahue in Terra Lucida are among a number of poets for whom the long poem, often in serial form, proves to be a “revelation that gives order to creation and cosmos.”
The writing of a new scripture, however, is not without serious risk. For Duncan, the attempt to compose a testament that will bring order to the cosmos seems doomed to a fall which repeats the original gnostic disaster: “the curve of the poem / withdraws its promise” he declares in the first volume of Ground Work, and in the second volume, he is forced to acknowledge that “The Book will not hold this poetry” (Duncan 2014, pp. 470, 726). Likewise, Mackey writes in “Song of the Andoumboulou: 42” that “What we rode was a book. We / fell out of it, scattered. / The book fell out of my / hand while I slept” (Mackey 2006, p. 29). Intuiting this risk, Ronald Johnson, a more optimistic poet sharing the same ambition, observes in ARK 90 that “if Gods there be to address / read out scrapture / released planet’s snare” (Johnson 2013, p. 280). Scrapture: a portmanteau containing scripture, scrap, and rapture, could well be the three principles upon which Johnson’s long poem is based. A rapturous scripture made largely from the scraps of culture that the poet has gathered over a lifetime, ARK encourages the gods themselves to read its text, while sending its human readers toward the heavens, blissfully released from the “planet’s snare.” This is the same trajectory as Lissa Wolsak’s in Lightsail (a light sail is a device attached to a spacecraft to harness solar power for propulsion): like ARK, Lightsail envisions scripture as starship. It also returns us to H.D.’s divine Lady who reveals “the unwritten volume of the new.” Speaking of her prophetic calling, Wolsak testifies that “she appeared to us just / as in prespacetime, / then, cosmopoietically, one by one,” the goddess brings “searingly imaginative / ideas of elevation