Lorine Niedecker
What I think of Niedecker changes with my mood. This is from the 2002 Collected Works. Before that, as with Oppen, there were incomplete or eccentric selected editions of her work. One, From This Condensery is, according to Jenny Penberty, the editor of the collected edition, “seriously flawed”. It is also a gorgeous book and very expensive if you can find it. Another, edited by Sid Corman, The Granite Pail, is too short a selection to reveal the poet Niedecker was. I found the book today in the library, while searching for Frank O’Hara stuff. I was so excited (it had been out for years, in the hands of a talented and friendly grad student here, Karen, who was dissertating on Niedecker, and poetry and science), that I opened it up to the pages transcribed below and started reading. I love her use of rhyme, her concise music, her precise eye.
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Lorine Niedecker from The Collected Works
Poems 1957-1959
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Linnaeus in Lapland
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Nothing worth noting
except an Andromeda
with quadrangular shoots—
the boots
of the people
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wet inside: they must swim
to the church thru the floods
or be taxed—the blossoms
from the blossoms
of the leaves
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*
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Fog-thick morning—
I see only
where I now walk. I carry
my clarity
with me
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*
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Hear
where her snow-grave is
the You
ah you
of mourning doves
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*
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Cricket-song—
What’s in the Times—
your name!
Fame
here
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on my doorstep
–an evening seedy
quiet thing.
It rings
a little.
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Musical Toys
for a blind child
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Do you see?—
sharp spires—
you could be hurt
by the church.
Better
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this dog
tinkling
three nice
mice
blind
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*
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I fear this war
will be long and painful
and who
pursue
Â
it
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*
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No matter where you are
you are alone
and in danger—well
to hell
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with it
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*
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How white the gulls
in grey weather
Soon April
the little
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yellows
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*
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White
among the green pads—
which
a dead fish
or a lily?
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*
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Dusk—
He’s spearing from a boat—
How slippery is man
in spring
when the small fish
spawn
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*
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New-sawed
clean-smelling house
sweet cedar pink
flesh tint
I love you
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*
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My friend tree
I sawed you down
but I must attend
an older friend
the sun
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You are missing some sections in the “Toys” poem
Joanna,
Thank you for reading. I don’t know if it’s inadvertant or the edition I was using. I posted this a while back.
Jon