"On the last day of the world I would want to plant a tree.” — W.S. Merwin
  • Cape Hatteras

    (1)
    Posted on November 22nd, 2005sherryPoets

    Talk about word drunk – I cannot read Hart Crane. I just find my rather flighty attention drifting away from his profligacy of words and the puzzle of his meaning. But while once in a while a line may seem perhaps tortured and pathetic:

    “Slit the sky’s pancreas of foaming anthracite..”

    occasional passages just knock me flat:

    Up-chartered choristers of their own speeding
    They, cavalcade on escapade, shear Cumulus—
    Lay siege and hurdle cirrus down the skies!

    or

    Lead-perforated fuselage, escutcheoned wings
    Lift agonized quittance, tilting from the invisible brink
    Now eagle-bright, now
                                                  quarry-hid, twist-
                                                                                ings down
    Giddily spiraled
                                        gauntlets, upturned, unlooping
    In guerilla slights, trapped in combustion, gyr-
    Ing, dance the curdled depth
                                                            down whizzing
    Zodiacs, dashed
                                        (now nearing fast the Cape!)
                                                                  down gravitation’s
                                                                                  vortex into crashed
    . . . dispersion . . . into mashed and shapeless debris . . .
    By Hatteras bunched the beached heap of high bravery!

    These lines are from the Cape Hatteras section of “The Bridge” in The Complete Poems and Selected Letters and Prose of Hart Crane (Anchor Books, 1966) that my husband bought for $1.50 at the Student Coop of the University of Chicago in 1975 or thereabouts.

One Response to “Cape Hatteras”

  1. I’m doing a report on Hart Crane. Yet the poems that I need are listed nowhere! The libraries not open and I’ve procrastinated to the last day.
    Where can I find, Ave Maria, Cape Hatteras and such workings like those when all I find is reviews?

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