John Lee ClarkTHE RETROACTIVE POEMS OF ALFRED CASTNER KINGAt the close of the nineteenth century, there was an aspiring poet working in a mine in Ouray, Colorado. Although he had written many poems, he felt he could not justify adding yet another book to "our already inflated and overloaded literature, unless it should contain something in the nature of a deviation from beaten literary paths." He was content to wait until his work matured after further studies in "etymology, rhetoric, Latin and Greek." The justification for publishing his w came to Alfred Castner King sooner than expected. On March 17, 1900—one day after his twenty-sixth birthday—there was an accident in the mine. The explosion, he wrote, "banished the light of the Colorado sun from his eyes forever." In the following months he went from hospital to hospital "in an ineffectual attempt to regain even partial sight." Then his "ambition slowly rallied." His physical recovery from the accident was also a recovery of his "ideas and efforts of past years." He and his mother quickly worked to put them into publishable form. The first of his two collections of poems appeared the following year, thus launching his long career as a lecturer and performer. Most of his poems were drafted before he became DeafBlind, and, indeed, they speak of mountaintop vistas and the music of nature. A few poems were created after the accident, such as "Life�s Undercurrent," in which the speaker contrasts his fate with that of other hospital patients. It is harder to tell with a few other poems whether they had been written after the accident, such as "The Miner" and "The Suicide." "The Miner" is an anthem to the dangerous profession. Was it a daring young man who had written it, or a proud survivor? "The Suicide" also offers us very different possible readings. On the subject the speaker expresses horror and compassion. If it was written after King�s traumatic accident, it is an example, one of many in literature, of a disabled poet seeking to stand alongside abled society by bidding it to gaze at someone else. Did King direct that gaze as a hearing-sighted man or after he had become DeafBlind? Even if "The Suicide" was written before the accident, it is a product, retroactively, of our literature because King published and recited the poem as a DeafBlind man. There hadn�t been enough time between the accident and the publication of his first book for him to make much progress in adopting his new identity. "Life�s Undercurrent" finds the speaker still feeling that his situation is worse than any other patient�s. In time, however, King would become comfortable as a DeafBlind person. Thus, he may have circled back to assume the same attitude toward suicide that he once held as a hearing-sighted person, horrified and moved by it but not identifying with it at all. As it happeneed, suicide was a favorite topic on the same lecture circuits King traveled in. Also, the British writer William Hurrell Malloch�s controversial 1879 book Is Life Worth Living? had made that question one of the most frequently discussed in these lecture halls. Eugenics was gaining traction, turning the issue into a question not of whether but whose life was worth living, and King�s audiences must have often wondered how he could bear to live in his condition. Aside from "Life�s Undercurrent," his implicit response is that his life is unquestionably worth living. If he suggests a line between lives worth and not worth living, it is based on love, the subject of "Deprive this strange and complex world…" and "Missed." King lived in a society at the peak of its preoccupation, grounded in nineteenth-century sentimentality, with different kinds of love—romantic, patriotic, maternal, and Christian. Malloch lamented that romantic love, in particular, was "endowed with something that is almost of the nature of a duty. He went on to explain that "If a man cannot love, it is looked on as a sort of moral misfortune, if not as a moral fault in him." Through his poetry, King repeatedly reinforces the view of love as the most basic human attainment and he reassures his readers and himself that he is morally secure. For the speaker of "Deprive this strange and complex world…," it doesn�t matter if one is deprived of hearing and sight, so long there�s still love. The speaker in "Missed," like the one in "The Suicide," turns the reader�s attention away from himself and toward those so unfortunate as to have never experienced love or to be incapable of it. King�s most persuasive claim to kinship with his readers, however, is human mortality. He wrote many poems on the subject, most of them tedious—one labors under the title of "Mortality: A Dissertation"—but the short "Thoughts" is one of his loveliest poems. Here, death is tangible, something that the speaker has handled and taken the measure of while digging a grave on three occasions. He wonders "Where, and by whom, would my last home be made." Alfred Castner King was born on March 16, 1874, to Lillian T. Vanca of Leslie, Michigan. As a boy his family moved to Colorado, where he attended school in Buena Vista. He was working as an assayer in an Ouray mining operation when an explosion blinded him. He would also experience varying degrees of deafness for the rest of his life. This change prompted him to publish his poetry and to travel across the United States, lecturing, performing with his flute, and selling his books. Sometime before 1904, he married Florence Wheeler, and they settled in Fruita, raising three children, two of whom, Alfred Jr. and Virgil, reached adulthood. By 1925, according to Outlook for the Blind, he had sold 150,000 copies of Mountain Idylls (1901) and The Passing of the Storm and Other Poems (1907). Affectionately known as "Cass" among intimates and as "the blind bard of Colorado" in the newspapers, he died on August 30, 1941, in Grand Junction, Colorado.
Six Poems from Mountain Idylls (1901)The Miner Clink! Clink! Clink! Clink! Clink! Clink! Clink! Clink! Clink! Clink! Clink! Clink! * * * Life's Undercurrent Within the precincts of a hospital, My gaze soon rested on the stricken form I next beheld a thin but patient face, Within her room a beauteous maiden lay, A helpless paralytic met my eyes, With wasted form, emaciate and wan, That day with fetters obdurate and fast, * * * "Deprive this strange and complex world&hellip:" Deprive this strange and complex world The world may lose its massive piles * * * The Suicide What anguish rankled 'neath that silent breast? What desperation nerved that rigid hand Perhaps the hand of unrelenting fate Perhaps 'twas some misfortune's stunning blight, Perhaps the gnawing of some secret sin, That heart which throbbed in pain and discontent Those eyes, transfixed with such a gruesome stare, Whate'er his secret, it remains untold, Ye who have felt no crushing weight of care, * * * Missed Pity the child who never feels Pity the heart which loves in vain, Pity those missed by Cupid's darts, * * * Thoughts I dug a grave, one smiling April day, I dug a grave, 'twas in the month of June; I dug a grave by Autumn's sober light,
John Lee Clark is the author, most recently, of the essay collection Where I Stand (Handtype Press, 2014). His recent poems have appeared in or are forthcoming in Rattle, Poem-a-Day, Poetry, Poetry International, and The Nation. This piece is from his manuscript A Hidden Legacy: Early DeafBlind Literature 1820-1933. |