I mean literally, the things people scrawl on the flyleaves and in the margins of books. My mother taught me not to deface books, not even to dog-ear them, but tell it to a poet! There's real treasure in literary marginalia: notes, scribbles, and assorted editorial comments added to books. Take Blake's famous comment on Francis Bacon - "Philosophy has Destroyd all art & Science." Blake really had it in for the artist Sir Joshua Reynolds, on whose death he scrawled, "Funeral granted to Sir Joshua for having destroyd Art . . . ." Unlike many a lesser poet, though, Blake ordinarily attacked ideas not people, and tried to delete that comment. Coleridge is the most copious of literary marginalia-writers; he even invented the word "marginalia." Anybody who let him borrow a book would later find reams of cramped, scribbled commentary it it; his essay-like annotations have been collected in a set of six volumes (so far) that contain some eight thousand notes. (Alas, the best-known marginal note isn't by a poet: Fermat's "last theorem," which didn't even fit in the margins of the book he was defacing; Wikipedia says it's the most famous solved problem in the history of mathematics.) Other stuff written inside books include doodles, reader's marks like stars, asterisks, crosses... but also actual poems! So guess what we recently found! Read on after the jump...
A couple of years ago a ton of press was given the discovery of a poem - no masterpiece - Robert Frost inscribed in the cover of a friend's book back in 1918, though a scholar tells me you can find so-called "lost" poems by Frost scribbled in many an old book. Let's face it, it's fun and exciting to think you've turned up something that came from a famous hand. (When I was a curator, I was thrilled to discover handwritten lyrics to the song "American Pie" which Don McLean had written out himself to impress the influential Harvard English professor Harry Levin.) Unsurprisingly, there are more lost works attributed to Shakespeare than anyone else; anyone remember the fabulously awful ''Shall I Die? Shall I Fly?'' There will always be an England, and there will always be "new" Shakespeare poems. But I digress.
Thank goodness, I say, for people who write in books. And this month in Poetry magazine we're thrilled to present three newly-discovered poems by Langston Hughes, introduced by his editor and biographer, Arnold Rampersad. The poems were written in pencil on the endpapers of the poet’s copy of An Anthology of Revolutionary Poetry and discovered by Penny Welbourne, a rare book cataloger at Yale University, where Hughes's papers and personal library are housed.
Rampersad says: "The truth is that we cannot have too many poems by Langston Hughes." These previously unpublished works, which echo his better-known poems, are very bitter, very harsh. As Rampersad puts it, "As a black writer facing racism on a daily basis, he had a remarkably precise sense of scale, as well as an inspired knowledge of the words and rhythms of speech that would best convey his messages to blacks and whites alike." The poem, "You and your whole race" asks some of us to be ashamed that we
"have not the sense to care
Nor the manhood to stand up and say
I dare you to come one step nearer, evil world,
With your hands of greed seeking to touch my throat, I dare you to come one step nearer me,"
and ends:
"When you can say that
you will be free!"
You can read the poems here, and Rampersad's essay here.
Enjoy them, and... keep your eyes peeled for lost verses! Maybe a nice Moleskine is best for your poetry, though.
Don Share was the editor of Poetry magazine from 2013-2020. His books of poetry are Wishbone (2012),...
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