James Dickey's top 10 poets of 1971
Bought a copy of Crux, The Letters of James Dickey, the other day at a very good used bookstore, Alias on Sawtelle in West LA, and stumbled upon this bizarrism. According to the book, in 1971, Gordon Lish proposed that a well-known photographer take pictures of the “top ten US poets”, and then James Dickey would write a paragraph response to each, stating why he was a superior poet. Lish suggested among others: Robert Lowell, Robert Duncan, Robert Creeley, Gary Snyder, J.V. Cunningham, (someone should have told him to change his name away from junior varsity), Allen Ginsberg, Galway Kinnell, Alan Dugan, and Howard Nemerov. James Dickey wrote back to Lish’s proposal:
“As to your astonishing note of October 28th, I hardly know what to say. You surely must know that I could not consider for a moment doing something like this. I have no intention whatever of getting into the Hemmingway-Mailer camp, and talk all around the game rather than playing it.”
“Incidentally, aside from Lowell, none of these other people you list would be even in the first fifty American poets, as far as I, personally, am concerned. Ginsberg, Snyder, Creeley, and Duncan indeed! Lord, Lord!”
“The ten best poets, I think are—(in no particular order)
1. Pound (I guess he is still American)
2. Auden
3. Dickey
4. Lowell
5. Wilbur
6. A.R. Ammons
7. Wm. Stafford
8. Elizabeth Bishop
9. John Berryman
10. James Wright”
It’s somehow funny that he says “no particular order”, but then proceeds to number them, and create a hierarchy in the spelling of the names: the first five are solely last names, the next two have abbreviated first names, (as if their first names are shrinking away), and the last three have first and last names. Gold, Silver, Bronze?
That he lists himself third, in the third-person, is icing on a perverse cake.
Jeffrey McDaniel is the author of five books of poetry, most recently Chapel of Inadvertent Joy (University...
Read Full Biography