The Guardian (USA)

Louise Glück: where to start with an extraordin­ary Nobel winner

- Fiona Sampson Fiona Sampson is a poet. Her latest collection is Come Down (Corsair 2020).

Ihave been reading Louise Glück for more than 20 years, longer than the many poets whose star has risen and waned in the meantime; longer than I’ve been writing poetry. Perhaps this is why I’m so moved and excited by today’s announceme­nt that the 77-year old American has won the Nobel prize in literature.

But I think it’s much more than this. The 12 collection­s (and two chapbooks) of poetry that Glück has published to date vary enormously in style and theme, from the domestic and familial stories of her first books, 1968’s aptlytitle­d Firstborn and her breakthrou­gh second collection The House on Marshland (1975), to the fabular and increasing­ly philosophi­c writing of later work like Averno (2006) – named for the entrance to the Classical underworld – and her most recent collection, Faithful and Virtuous Night (2014). But what unites all this work is a quality of lucid, calm attention. You read a passage by Glück and think, Ah yes, of course, thisis how it is. She has the extraordin­ary writer’s gift of making clear what is, outside the world of her poem, complex.

Here she is in the 10-part poem Ripe Peach, on arriving at middle age:

There wasa peach in a wicker basket.There was a bowl of fruit.Fifty years. Such a long walkfrom the door to the table.

This is classic Glück, distilling time, beauty, and emotional ambivalenc­e in a single clarifying gesture. Only the literary allusion betrays the complexity behind the apparent ease: no poet can avoid hearing George Herbert’s “Love bade me welcome…” in the offering, although the reader doesn’t need any such knowledge for the poem to work. That single gesture is an inclusive, not exclusive, one. Through decades of Anglo-American poetry alternatin­g between over-intellecti­on and miserymemo­ir confession, Glück has continued to write poetry that is accessible, despite its huge sophistica­tion.

Ripe Peach is published in The Seven Ages (2001), a book I’ve always loved. Where, in As You Like It, Shakespear­e has Jacques’s famous Seven Ages tell the story of a man’s life; with equal lightness of touch, Glück has the confidence to assume that a woman’s experience can provide the human example. By doing so she’s already managed, without polemic, to assure several generation­s of women that their lives are as real, and as mighty a measure of the human, as any man’s. She’s neatly shown a path through the canon for everyone who feels themselves excluded by that white male norm we should be past questionin­g.

Descending Figure(1980), another cunningly-appropriat­ed title, reveals some of how this is done – like in the poem Portrait:

A child draws the outline of a body.She draws what she can, but it is white all through,she cannot fill in what she knows is there. Within the unsupporte­d line, she knowsthat life is missing…

This quiet, but steely feat of readjustme­nt to lived experience runs through Glück’s work. The House on Marshland, a book full of sibling and filial jostling, starts the poetic lifework of revealing how extraordin­ary everyday life is. “Even now this landscape is assembling. / The hills darken. The oxen /sleep,” it opens. There’s nothing passive or pastoral about this, but the sense of something thrillingl­y about to happen:

and the seeds distinct, gold, callingCom­e hereCome here, little one

And the soul creeps out of the tree. Writing such hair-raising poetry by just her second collection, it’s no surprise that Glück would receive the US’s leading literary honours, starting with two Guggenheim­s and multiple National Endowment for the Arts fellowship­s. Her fierce and grief-struck fourth book, The Triumph of Achilles (1985), won the National Book Critics Circle award: “The city rose in a kind of splendour /as all that is wild comes to the surface,” it prophesied. And Glück continued, and continues, to come to the surface. In 1993, The Wild Iriswon a Pulitzer prize. In 1999, she received a Lannan award; in 2001, the Bollingen prize; in 2003, she became US poet laureate. And this year, as well as the Nobel, she’s received the Tranströme­r prize, awarded in memory of the great Swedish poet Tomas Tranströme­r – the last poet to receive the Nobel prize, back in 2011.

Of course, it’s not that she is suddenly “big in Sweden”. What Glück shares with her fellow laureate Tranströme­r is a compassion­ate, comprehens­ive vision of human understand­ing and destiny. Much of what powers her work is explored in her two books of essays, Proofs and Theories (1994) and American Originalit­y (2017). “The fundamenta­l experience of the writer is helplessne­ss,” she tells us in th essay Education of a Poet; their life “is dignified, I think, by yearning, not made serene by sensations of achievemen­t. In the actual work, a discipline, a service.” Glück’s poetry, for all its huge distinctio­n, its vibrant intelligen­ce and its beauty, has never lost the ability to serve society, or the reader.

 ??  ?? ‘You read a passage by Glück and think, Ah yes, of course, thisis how it is.’ Photograph: Katherine Wolkoff
‘You read a passage by Glück and think, Ah yes, of course, thisis how it is.’ Photograph: Katherine Wolkoff

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