Dos Passos-savvy

I’ve been doing so much JDP legacy work lately I was inspired to write a poem about it:

Dos Passos-savvy

 

When I was a boy I knew books;

they showed

sharks, rays, barracudas,

saw-jawed megalodons,

Tyrannosaurus rex,

Fujita scale tornadic intensity,

cirrus, cumulocirrus, cumulonimbus clouds,

Hercules holding up the world, no tears, no help.

 

I knew books, and

my grandfather, John Dos Passos,

was just a famous writer gone before I was born,

just a name I couldn’t get right.

 

I was a boy with a life and snowballs to make,

and he was history,

old like the aboriginal stories I learned in grade school,

old like the dream time when formed rivers, lakes, and all creation.

I was a boy with a strong young heart,

tearing leaves off tulip poplar trees.

 

I knew books, I said,

until I wrote a book of my own.

 

Now, I’m Dos Passos-savvy.

Now, it’s a triumvirate of syllables,

an buy cabergoline india easy name for critics to forget,

for neoconservatives to coopt,

for liberals to cheer.

It’s still a hard name to get right.

 

It’s a name on the bookshelf

between Dickens and Dostoevsky,

a name on a gravestone in Westmoreland County, Virginia.

 

Stuck in perpetual May, Dos Passos Farm is home.

I tell of bobwhite quail wake-up calls on Saturday morning,

bald eagles jousting with ospreys and always winning,

wild turkeys fussing across green-turquoise wheat,

snapping turtles for beagles to chastise,

magnolias for children to climb,

and the field of crocuses you planted.

 

I know your dining room, your dumbwaiter,

your downstairs libraries, your upstairs libraries,

your painting of a red mountain village that reminds me of Spain,

and the writing desk where you chronicled America.

Previous
Previous

Dos Passos and the Sound of New York City

Next
Next

Earth Day