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<text id=93TT0074>
<title>
Oct 18, 1993: Rooms Of Their Own:Rita Dove
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Oct. 18, 1993 What in The World Are We Doing?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
LITERATURE, Page 88
Rooms Of Their Own
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Both were born in Ohio to African-American parents who had migrated
from the South. Both became writers. Last week Rita Dove began
her term as the U.S. poet laureate. And novelist Toni Morrison
won the Nobel Prize for Literature.
</p>
<p> RITA DOVE
</p>
<p>By JACK E. WHITE/CHARLOTTESVILLE
</p>
<p> Two centuries ago, Thomas Jefferson expressed the view that
blacks were innately incapable of writing poetry because "their
love is ardent, but it kindles the senses only, not the imagination."
He dismissed the work of Phillis Wheatley, the first African-American
female poet, as "below the dignity of criticism." There is no
evidence that the sage of Monticello had actually read Wheatley's
poems before issuing his put-down. In fact, he misspelled her
name.
</p>
<p> How fitting, then, that America's new poet laureate is Rita
Dove, a black woman who calls herself a spiritual heir of Wheatley's,
and whose verses appeal not only to the senses but also to the
imagination and the intellect. Moreover, Dove does her work
on Jefferson's own turf. She lives with her husband, German
novelist Fred Viebahn, and their 10-year-old daughter Aviva
on a wooded hillside near Charlottesville, Virginia, a 15-minute
drive from Monticello. She teaches creative writing at the University
of Virginia, which Jefferson founded. And last week she made
her public debut as poet laureate by reading from her passionately
lyrical stanzas in the Jefferson Building of the Library of
Congress in Washington, whose vast collection was replenished
by 6,000 volumes purchased from Jefferson's library after the
British burned the U.S. Capitol during the War of 1812.
</p>
<p> So what would Jefferson think of making Dove the nation's official
voice of poetry? "I think he would be dismayed and say it was
a political move, an affirmative-action thing," says Dove. "But
then I don't really think of him as any great judge of poetry.
He was dead wrong about Phillis. She had to deal with one of
the dilemmas of the black artist that still exist today, that
no matter what you do there's still this feeling that it's not
good enough."
</p>
<p> Not so with Dove, whose qualifications are beyond dispute, even
though she satisfies all the demands of political correctness.
At 40 Dove is the youngest person, second woman (after Mona
Van Duyn) and first African-American to be chosen as poet laureate
since the position was created eight years ago. "She was the
absolutely perfect choice," says Gwendolyn Brooks, the only
other black woman to win a Pulitzer Prize for poetry. "She can
be brightly irreverent, carefully humorous and mercilessly inclusive.
She has it in her to become a great poet."
</p>
<p> Unlike her British counterpart, who is expected to crank out
disposable verses on such occasions as the birth of a member
of the royal family, Dove is only required to deliver one public
reading of her own work and organize appearances by other writers.
Beyond that, her task is to promote poetry in whatever way she
chooses.
</p>
<p> Dove will bring enormous energy and flamboyance to the assignment.
She is an artist bursting with the need to express herself right
down to her fingernails, each painted in a different, dazzlingly
bright color. "This way I never have to worry about matching
my nails to what I'm wearing," she says, then adds a deeper
explanation: "I like the idea that it makes people startle a
little bit and think that maybe not everything is just what
meets the eye. I think people should be shaken up a bit when
they walk through life. They should stop for a moment and really
look at ordinary things and catch their breath."
</p>
<p> The comment applies equally well to Dove's poetry. What impresses
critics most about her work is the effortless economy and exactness
of the language she employs to distill the essence of life's
small happenings, etching gemlike verbal images that detonate
a gentle shock of recognition. "I just believe that everyday
moments are immensely valuable to us and that recorded history
does not acknowledge them sufficiently," says Dove. "That's
why I'm drawn to making readers stop for a moment and pay attention
to something that seems very ordinary. When we can learn to
appreciate moments like that, we can feel freed inside."
</p>
<p> For example, a child's small triumph with geometry homework:
</p>
<p> I prove a theorem and the house expands:
</p>
<p> the windows jerk free to hover near the ceiling,
</p>
<p> the ceiling floats away with a sigh.
</p>
<p> The frenzied preparations for a younger sister's wedding:
</p>
<p> My mother works up a sudsbath
</p>
<p> of worries: what if
</p>
<p> the corsages are too small,
</p>
<p> if the candles
</p>
<p> accidentally ignite
</p>
<p> the reverend's sleeve?
</p>
<p> Dove's poems often transcend racial boundaries, celebrating,
almost like a highbrow Erma Bombeck, the domestic ties all families
share. "There are times when I am a black woman who happens
to be a poet, and times when I am a poet who happens to be black,"
says Dove. "There are also times when I am more conscious of
being a mother or a member of my generation. It's so hopelessly
confused that I don't make a big deal out of it."
</p>
<p> Yet Dove's works are most affecting when they focus on how small
lives play out against the background of sweeping historical
events from the black experience. That approach is best exemplified
by Thomas and Beulah, a 44-poem collection evoking the lives
of her maternal grandparents. One of Dove's four books of verse
(she has also written a novel and a collection of short stories),
it won a Pulitzer Prize in 1987. She took poetic liberties,
changing her grandmother's name from Georgianna because Beulah
scanned better. But, she says, her ancestors, who moved from
the South to the smokestack city of Akron, Ohio, in the vast
black migration of the early 20th century, would recognize themselves.
</p>
<p> The saga was inspired, says Dove, "by a very small, unassuming
moment." Assigned as a 14-year-old to keep her grandmother company
after her grandfather died, Dove heard the stories of how they
fell in love, made their living and raised their children. Each
incident later became a poem: Thomas' youthful wandering along
the Mississippi River; her grandparents' purchase of a "sky
blue Chandler" car for a trip to Tennessee; Thomas' witnessing
of the disastrous crash of a huge airship constructed at an
Akron rubber factory. In Dove's loving reconstruction, Thomas
emerges as a dandy:
</p>
<p> King of the Crawfish
</p>
<p> in his yellow scarf,
</p>
<p> mandolin pressed tight
</p>
<p> to his hounds-tooth vest
</p>
<p> He is eventually domesticated by her grandmother, a serious-minded
woman who could nonetheless be stirred into a reverie about
an old beau by polishing the furniture:
</p>
<p> Under her hands scrolls
</p>
<p> and crests gleam
</p>
<p> darker still. What
</p>
<p> was his name, that
</p>
<p> silly boy at the fair with
</p>
<p> the rifle booth?
</p>
<p> In the end, the reader feels a deep intimacy with these people
and their history. A similar sense of connection is what Dove
hopes to bring to her new post. She believes she can make poetry
seem less airy and irrelevant. "I think one of the things you
have to do is show that poets are real people who write about
real things," she says. "I'm hoping that by the end of my term
people will think of a poet laureate as someone who's out there
with her sleeves rolled up and working, not sitting in an ivory
tower looking out at the Potomac."
</p>
<p> Dove wants to re-create for the young her own awestruck discovery
of poetry's power, which began when she took down an anthology
of American verse from the bookshelf in her family's home in
Akron. After that, her otherwise strict parents made no attempt
to censor what she read, and she read everything from Gone With
the Wind to Sylvia Plath. "I remember reading [Plath's] poem
Daddy, which ends, `Daddy, Daddy, you bastard, I'm through,'"
says Dove. "I realized that you don't have to be polite in
poetry, and I couldn't get enough of it after that."
</p>
<p> At first Dove's love affair with poems unfolded with little
encouragement--or interference--from her teachers. That
convinced her that poetry should be experienced, not talked--or taught--to death. "One of the major reasons why poetry
has gotten a bad rap is that at school we had to read a poem
and then answer questions about it," says Dove. "But I think
that when a poem moves you, it moves you in a way that leaves
you speechless. Poems, if they're really wonderful poems, have
used the best possible words and in the best possible order,
and anything you say about them seems like a desecration. I
think I grew up without that feeling of oppression because when
I began to read poems, no one told me anything. I was just reading
these things and deciding for myself."
</p>
<p> Dove hopes to restore that sense of personal discovery through
high tech. She wants to use closed-circuit TV to broadcast readings
into elementary and junior high schools, then answer questions
from the students. "I think we can get these kids when they're
young," she says. "I think they would be sufficiently intrigued
by the closed-circuit aspect of it. It also gets them out of
regular classes. I'll take it from there."
</p>
<p> Not that Dove is aiming for the lowest common denominator. She
believes poems can be too easy, too accessible to have lasting
value. "There should be something to intrigue you, to hold you
enough so that you're willing to live with it and work it out
on your own," she says. "A good poem is like a bouillon cube.
It's concentrated, you carry it around with you, and it nourishes
you when you need it." With Dove as poet laureate, Americans
will get plenty of poetic sustenance.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>