Cover to Cover with Jack Foley

Cover to Cover with Jack Foley – August 14, 2019

Jack turned 79 on Wednesday, August 9. Today’s show is his annual birthday celebration. He writes,

On August 9, 2019 I turned 79. Today’s show is an examination of that fact. In anticipation, I’m calling the show LIFE BEGINS AT EIGHTY OR IS IT LIES BEGIN AT EIGHTY. I have friends who are eighty—and eighty plus. My high school friends, some of whom I’m in contact with once more through Facebook, are either dead or turning 79 with me. What can be said of all that—a life. My friend Ivan Argüelles said to me yesterday, “You don’t know when you might go. You might go at anytime. You can’t count on anything anymore.” True enough, and—as has happened to poet friends—not only might you die but a sudden stroke might put you seriously out of commission. Yet here you are, alive and reasonably healthy.

What can be said of all this life?

The show deals with speculations about the nature of poetry and the relationship of the I, the ego, to the art and presents various recent works. Here is one:

 

FOR SANGYE, JULY 10, 2019

in anticipation of her birthday, July 13

 

Yesterday we bought rings.

A shop in Mill Valley.

Claddagh rings

To speak heart’s truth.

Today I drew blood

From the finger on which

I bore the ring

As if in affirmation.

We each continue to learn

New things

About the other.

I can’t tell you

How amazed and delighted I am

That you are interested in

George M. Cohan

And loved a film

I doubt that anyone else your age

Has ever seen:

The Phantom President (1932)

With Cohan, Jimmy Durante

And Claudette Colbert

(The shortest leading lady

The studio could find

To match Cohan,

She five feet five

He five feet four)

And Sidney Toler,

The second non Asian to play Charlie Chan.

(I’m not sure you’ve ever seen

A Charlie Chan movie.)

What delight we take

In watching films together.

Your mind rings

In mine as we send notes to one another

Across distances

That are not really distances

Because we stay in touch.

There’s a ring for my finger

And a ring for yours

As you reach the age

That Dante Alighieri called

The middle of the journey of our life

And I watch

The wonderful light in your eyes

Grow brighter.

Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita.

 

 

 

AFTER BORGES’S “THE ART OF POETRY”—for Sangye

 

Looking at a woman’s face

We sometimes see the color of dreams,

The face of a woman we see only in dreams

Which is also our own face,

 

Gazing back at us as in a mirror,

And the sound of a voice echoing

In our consciousness, echoing

From the face of the mirror,

 

Or as we lay dreaming in deep sleep

And only our fantasy moves us to action,

To discover the possibility of action

In the vast river we call sleep

 

That protects us from the world

As a poem does, as the world is, in a poem,

Vast, echoing, inhabiting the poem,

A sweet, green, ululating world.

 

Borges’s beautiful, elegant lines

Bring us into the pastiche of his thought

And into the images that haunt his thought

As a river makes its way in wayward, wandering lines

 

And my love, like a river, is a wonder

That draws me deeply to a woman named Sangye

And to my knowledge that “Buddha” is the meaning of “Sangye,”

And to poetry, to the vast river that Time is, to Borges, and to wonder.

Leave a Reply