Writers' Community!
Home News Business Science & Technology Life
Front Page Page Two Columnists Submit an Article FAQs Contact Author Login
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 5,555 Authors
48,423 Quality Articles
& 3,664 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
Tex Norman is a fan of:
Dianne Lehmann (3,112)
Susan Thom (9,014)
Ira Coffin (897)
Bruce Horst (759)
Mogama (12,156)
Christine Akiteng (75,494)
Gregory Lewis (295)
James P Krehbiel (1,443)
Judge Dred (1,375)
E. Raymond Rock (1,925)
Mark Parsec (18,765)
Most Recent
How to Get Poetry

Rules (a Villanelle)

There Was Blood On Our Food

The Transportational Power of Poetry

Is Rhyme Obsolete

Worry and Deserve: two poems

Child Abuse and Murder (Two Poems from the verse novel Zounds)

We Met

A Brave Working Poet Laureate Who Never Actually Served

Americas Most Controversial and ALMOST 7th Poet Laureate

Home » Categories » Literature » Other Literature » A Brave Working Poet Laureate Who Never Actually Served » Reprint Rights » Printer Friendly

Tex Norman

A Brave Working Poet Laureate Who Never Actually Served

Rated 3.5 out of 5
No Reader Ratings Available ?
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by Tex Norman
Submitted Wednesday, October 08, 2008
Tex Norman (4,329)
Tex Norman


Log in to become a member of Tex Norman's Fan Club!


William Carlos Williams was a medical doctor, a dedicated poet blazing a path to modern poetry. Being a doctor is enough for us to admire him. Being a doctor and prolific brave doctor is even more to be admired. But Dr. Williams was also a man of principal, he had spine, grit, and for that I find the man amazing.

Perhaps the two most famous poems by Dr. Williams deal with rain falling on a red wheelbarrow and a note left to explain to a host that he had eaten the prunes he found in the ice box. At a time when most poems told a story and were restricted by inflexible rules of meter and rhyme, these simple little poems were stunning. Few of us are stunned today, but at the time those poems were written almost no one was brave enough or forward looking enough to conceive of such poetry.

Dr. Williams was born in Rutherford, New Jersey, in 1883. Apparently poetry had a hold on him very early in his life because there are actually poems still in existence that he wrote while a student in high school It is claimed that in high school the young Williams made an overt decision to become both a writer and a medical doctor.

Dr. Williams earned his M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. It was at the University of Pennsylvania that he met another Poet Laureate candidate who never actually severed, Ezra Pound. While Pound is accepted by the world as a great poet, his most profound contribution to the art is, in my opinion, his influence on other poets, Dr. Williams being only one of a long list of notable poetic artists. For example, Pound is responsible for getting a London publisher to produce Dr. William's second volume of poetry The Tempers.

Dr. Williams returned to his hometown of Rutherford, where he set up and maintained a medical practice that remained active throughout his life. Eventually Dr. Williams began publishing in small magazines and embarked on a prolific career as a poet, novelist, essayist, and playwright. Today Dr. Williams is recognized as one of the principal poets of the Imagist movement, a movement also closely associated with Ezra Pound.

Dr. William's major works include:
Kora in Hell (1920), Spring and All (1923) Pictures from Brueghel and Other Poems (1962) Paterson (1963, 1992) a the five-volume epic, and Imaginations (1970).


Dr. Williams' health began to decline after a heart attack in 1948 and a series of strokes.

It is at this point in the good doctor's life that he demonstrated that old and ill as he was, he had a spine of still and was unwilling to bend to the political winds of his time.

You see, Dr. Williams was appointed as the Library of Congress Consultant in Poetry and thus began the last significant strangeness of his life, and of the Poet Laureate position. You see, like many intellectuals of the 1920s and 1930s he explored some interest in communism. Many intelligent thinking Americans did this, and most drew back from it once they noted the tendency of that political system to spawn dictatorships and a loss of human rights. Dr. Williams was appointed to this Consultant in Poetry position (later the name was changed to Poet Laureate) near the end of his life. The proposed appointment of the old and ailing William Carlos Williams in the early 1950s was problematic. He may have been one of the most famous and widely-respected poets in the country, but he was investigated by the FBI for Communist sympathies. Any questions regarding his political carelessness took place years before, but we were in the midst of a Cold War, and the country was in the clutches of that fear mongering Witch Hunting jerk Joseph McCarthy. So in 1952 Library of Congress halted, his appointment was cancelled, then he was told by the Librarian of Congress that he had been appointed to the job again effective May 15, 1953 or as soon thereafter as loyalty and security procedures are successfully completed.' The Library of Congress wanted this life long small town doctor and world recognized poet to go down to his local police department and be fingerprinted like a common criminal.

Dr. Williams flatly refused to comply with these requirements. Dr. Williams stated that he considered all this fingerprinting nonsense to be an indignity. This act of protest was not a protest against finger printing so much as it was a protest against McCarthyism and the fear mongering of the United States Government. Time ran out, and Williams was never appointed.

If you go to the Library of Congress website and click on the list of Poet Laureates you will see that they list William Carlos Williams as one of the Poets Laureate, but in truth, he never actually served in that position.

At the time of this literary brouhaha, The Washington Post editorial called the affair surprising, shocking and distressing' and quoted the critic John Barkham, who said, "Williams is the concentrated essence of Americanism in everything he says and does', and the poet himself was quoted as saying, For heavens' sake, what kind of country is this?'

The Williams question is one that I continue to ask. What follows are three short examples of Dr. Williams' work:



The Red Wheelbarrow by William Carlos Williams

so much depends

upon

a red wheel

barrow

glazed with rain

water

beside the white

chickens.

This Is Just To Say by William Carlos Williams

I have eaten

the plums

that were in

the icebox

and which

you were probably

saving

for breakfast

Forgive me

they were delicious

so sweet

and so cold

The Uses of Poetry by William Carlos Williams

I've fond anticipation of a day

O'erfilled with pure diversion presently,

For I must read a lady poesy

The while we glide by many a leafy bay,

Hid deep in rushes, where at random play

The glossy black winged May-flies, or whence flee

Hush-throated nestlings in alarm,

Whom we have idly frighted with our boat's long sway.

For, lest o'ersaddened by such woes as spring

To rural peace from our meek onward trend,

What else more fit? We'll draw the latch-string

And close the door of sense; then satiate wend,

On poesy's transforming giant wing,

To worlds afar whose fruits all anguish mend.


Tex Norman is a Child Welfare worker, who likes to write.  He sees ugliness every day.  Writing is how he tries to think through the difficulties of life.



This author of this Article has choosen to make this article available with free reprint rights.
Click here to copy this article.

Reprint Rights

Log in to become a member of Tex Norman's Fan Club!

Comments on this article:
No comments yet.


Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

 

This Article has been viewed 3 times.
Article added to SearchWarp.com on Wednesday, October 08, 2008
View other articles written by Tex Norman (4,329)
Tex Norman


If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


Today's Most Popular
Frankenstein Factors: Mary Shelley’s Influences

How to Look for Short Story Ideas

Tips for First Time Authors : 2 Easy Steps to Make Your First Book a Success

How To Draw Caricatures

Internet Relationships...do they work?

Here There Be Dragons – The Symbolism Of Dragon Lore In Western History

I Should Have Been A Nudist

How to Write Your Own Baby Shower Verses

Walden review by Bill Ectric

The Broker: John Grisham Tries His Skills At Espionage

Home  |  Page Two  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Writers' Contests  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
Copyright © 1999-2008 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company