I had the Glory—that will do—
An Honor, Thought can turn her to
When lesser Fames invite—
With one long "Nay"—
Bliss' early shape
Deforming—Dwindling—Gulfing up—
Time's possibility.
F350
(1862) 349
The
sadness in this poem comes from Dickinson’s insight that an early “Glory” can
lead to a lifetime of saying “Nay” to “lesser Fames,” and that this ultimately
leads to a “Deforming” of life. The poem is extremely concise and, as usual
with Dickinson’s more concise works (a very large body of work), it takes some
unpacking. The reader can’t just skim over it. Well, the reader can—and quite a
lot is gained: we immediately see that there was an early Glory, a “Bliss,” and
a long bit on “no” that is somehow related to “Time’s possibility” “Gulfing
up”—which is a splendid and very sad phrase. But nuance and other insights take
a couple of re-reads (at least I had to contemplate the poem for a while after
several reads).
Sometimes
it’s easiest to unpack by starting with what seems to be the most important
words. In this case I think the last two lines meet the criterion:
“Deforming—Dwindling—Gulfing up— / Time’s possibility.” When young, many of us
visualize life stretching out ahead, full of promise. We often do see Glory and
Honor ahead, particularly when we have had some sort of early experience with
glory. And although time disappoints us all to some degree, it can also
delight, astound, and bring significant rewards. Our lives takes shape over
time.
Early in her life, the speaker
of this poem experienced an extreme happiness, a bliss; but as she looks back
she sees that this promising trajectory—this “early shape”—has been deformed.
Her possibilities have dwindled—in fact have been swallowed up. The beginning of the poem tells us why. The
bliss came from some honor, something so glorious that the speaker found
herself saying ‘no’ to the invitations of “lesser Fames.” Her life became “one
long ‘Nay,’” and that has been a constricting, deforming process.
One can look at this poem
through a biographical lens and wonder what the historical Dickinson thinking
about. Perhaps it was her calling as a poet that she proclaimed so boldly and
gladly in “For
this—accepted Breath.” To fulfill that calling Dickinson did indeed
constrict her life, say no to many choices, and end up living much of her life
in her room. Or perhaps it was an early love for whose sake she turned down the
possibilities of other loves. And if, as it was indeed the case, this love was
doomed (through death or because the beloved was already married or did not,
ultimately, return the passion), then Bliss’ early shape would certainly deform
and dwindle.
Clouds close in the horizon of an otherwise lovely seascape |
But I don’t think we need to
overtax the poem with biographical speculation. It stands on its own as a
powerful meditation on the effects of choice on our lives.
The first two lines are
written in iambic tetrameter. The second line is tortured a bit for aesthetic
reasons: it should be read as “An Honor that thought can turn herself to” or “a
thought that I could turn to.” The first alternative sacrifices meter and the
second loses the personification of “Thought” that is fundamental to the sense
that it is the head rather than the heart whose rationalization has lead to the
speaker’s predicament.
The
third and fourth lines are structurally one line divided for emphasis: “one
long ‘Nay’” is slow and pondering as each syllable is accented. The “Bliss’” of
the second line is also accented, further lends a heaviness to the ongoing
negation. The two line endings, “Nay” and
“shape,” with their long vowels cause the reader to linger over them, and for
good reason: it is the Nay that deforms the shape of the life.
Dickinson
chooses the present continuous tense for deform, dwindle and gulf (engulf), and
for good reason. The actions continue without end in sight. Time’s possibility
will go on dwindling. The “ing” ending, falling off as it were, unaccented,
reflects the dwindling and falling off of possibilities. The line seems bogged
down and hopeless. The last word, “possibility,” seems impossibly long,
hopelessly soft and formless. Imagine if Dickinson had used the synonym “potential”—it
would have nothing of the softly dying hopes.
It seems she met in her a bliss beyond time whose shape the world in time could not fit into, thus deforming her relationship to the chronological, the autobiography. How to unify the Glory and the mundane, seems much of what ED writes about, and how painful and difficult it is to do or try to do. Having been shown a divine secret, how to live that out in time?
ReplyDeletehmmm... it's almost a curse, then, to have such a gift or divine secret. Perhaps this is behind such phrases as "this smart Misery" in the poem I just completed, F581.
DeleteI love your idea that the glory is her election (as poet), that is forever enough (“that will do”). The honor sustains her, even if “lesser fames” (detractors or jealous lesser talents or just people who dismiss her genius or seem oblivious to it, like her family) minimize her possibilities of future significance? I want to keep coming back to “that will do!”
ReplyDeleteNice. Yes, "that will do" is in the balance against being gulfed up by time. But it seems to be enough. It stands against the gulf, the dwindling and deforming. And yet I can see the alternate reading here too, that those lesser fames may've led to "possibility". The poem seems to see-saw between the two readings, once both are made apparent. I have to say I was baffled by this poem before I came here, and now I have two opposing readings!
DeleteThank you both for drawing attention to the 'that will do'. The early Honor does seem sturdy and enough but to me the comment sets a wistful tone that embues the poem with a sad pride.
DeleteI had Master’s love, if only for one glorious summer’s day, an honor I will always remember. That one day will do. When lesser loves invite, I can just say NO. Master’s love makes any other deforming, dwindling, drowning possibility of another.
ReplyDelete