Richard Wilbur’s “The Terrace”

I’ve just started reading Richard Wilbur’s Collected Poems: 1943-2004, and as usual I started with the earliest poems, though it meant I had to begin at the end of the collection. Although Wilbur does not entirely ignore the four years he spent fighting in World War II in the two volumes entitled “The Beautiful Changes and Other Poems,” 1947, and “Ceremony and Other Poems,” 1950, very few of the poems could be labeled “war poems.”

This poem, even though war is never mentioned, seems to me to accurately display the kind of alienation many soldiers experience after combat experience:

THE TERRACE

De la vaporisation et de la centralisation du Moi. Tout est là.
-Baudelaire

We ate with steeps of sky about our shoulders,
High up a mountainside,
On a terrace like a raft roving
Seas of view.

The tablecloth was green, and blurred away
Toward verdure far and wide,
And all the country came to be
Our table too.

We drank in tilted glasses of rosé
From tinted peaks of snow,
Tasting the frothy mist, and freshest
Fathoms of air.

Women were washing linens in a stream
Deep down below,
The sound of water over their knuckles
A sauce rare.

Imminent towns whose weatherbeaten walls
Looked like the finest cheese
Bowled us enormous melons from their
Tolling towers.

Mixt into all the day we heard the spice
Of many tangy bees
Eddying through the miles-deep
Salad of flowers.

When we were done we had our hunger still;
We dipped our cups in light;
We caught the fine-spun shade of clouds
In spoon and plate;

Drunk with imagined breathing, we inhaled
The dancing smell of height;
We fished for the bark of a dog, the squeak
Of a pasture gate.

But for all our benedictions and our gay
Readily said graces,
The evening stole our provender and
Left us there,

And darkness filled the specious space, and fell
Betwixt our silent faces,
Pressing against our eyes its absent
Fathomless stare.

Out in the dark we felt the real mountains
Hulking in proper might,
And we felt the edge of the black wind’s
Regardless cleave,

And we knew we had eaten not the manna of heaven
But our own reflected light,
And we were the only part of the night that we
Couldn’t believe.

This begins like a stereotypical love poem with a traditional romantic setting. The first eight stanzas are filled with the very language of love, “steeps of sky about our shoulders,” “verdure far and away,” “freshest fathoms of air” and poetic spellings like “mixt” and “betwixt.”

However, instead of the night bringing love’s fulfillment, as expected, it suddenly leaves the characters facing darkness’ “absent fathomless stare.” In the dark the mountains are “hulking,” and cold night winds “cleave” the two.

They conclude that any love they felt during the day must have been their “own reflected light,” a light that suddenly seems less believable standing there in the dark. Once having lost their “innocence, they seem incapable of believing the old myths. They are the equivalent of Hemingway’s “lost generation.” Having seen first hand what evil mankind is capable of, it’s hard to trust such “perfect moments.” They have lost faith in their very selves.

UPDATE: Here’s an interesting essay by Dana Gioai calledRichard Wilbur: A Critical Survey of His Career that has some war history particularly relevant to this poem, but also includes several equally interesting ideas.

A Last Look Back at the Zoo

I wanted to make one other comment before leaving the Seattle Zoo. Although I’ve focused on birds because of my recent interest in birding, the excellent ape exhibits actually seemed the most impressive.

Woodland Park’s gorilla Bobo was a mainstay of the zoo when I was younger. His popularity led to a major display, one of the first to provide â€?”natural habitat” at the zoo. It’s gotten even better since I last visited it, and if we’d been a little luckier Lael and I would have seen the new baby gorilla. As it was, I enjoyed watching the gorillas â€?”foraging” for food, particularly watching this one use a stick to retrieve a piece of fruit that had floated down the stream.

Gorrila retrieving fruit with stick

I’ll have to admit, though, that I was more impressed by the orangutan exhibit, which provided a widely-varied environment. While trying to sight an orangutan, I was amazed to see this young orangutan emerge from this gunny sack that it had covered itself with.

Young Orangutan Covered with  Bag

The zoo has done an admirable job of providing natural settings and varied activities in many of its exhibits. In doing so, they’ve managed to show the animals off in a much better light than neurotic, caged animals. It may be annoying when animals choose to disappear the day you choose to go the zoo, but it seems much more rewarding when you can observe them in what appears to be a â€?”natural” setting. I was particularly impressed by the number of apes that I saw using â€?”tools” to get food.

Three Shots I Wish I’d Taken

in the wild instead of at the Seattle Zoo.

Most shots I show from the various zoos I visit are of animals I have no chance of ever personally shooting, like Lions, and Tigers and Bears. I’m far too frugal to ever go to Africa or India, so I have no problem with shooting those animals at the zoo.

It’s only when it comes to birds that I manage to see and shoot regularly locally that I question whether I should photograph them, though in my imagination I think it would be fun to just put them on my page as if I’d managed to get a great shot in the wild.

It’s even more problematic when I already have several shots, just not nearly as good because it’s impossible to get as close in the wild. For instance, I’ve gotten some fairly good shots of eagles, but nothing nearly as good as this one where a platform allows you to get amazingly close to an Eagle’s nest.

Seattle Zoo Eagle

Here’s a shot of a pair of Tundra Swans, another bird I’ve glimpsed locally but have never managed to get a good shot of, though I hope to remedy that this winter.

Tundra Swans in Seattle Zoo

And, finally, here’s the best shot I’ve ever taken of a Green Heron, one I had almost as much trouble sighting in the Zoo’s pond as I’ve had sighting in the wild. Unfortunately, none of those I’ve sighted have ever had this magnificent of plumage,
probably because they were immature Green Herons.

Seattle's Green Heron

The last picture, particularly when seen full screen on my Apple Cinema Display, is probably as good of a picture as I’ve ever taken, or at least it seems that way to me, perhaps because I really like Green Herons after spending three years of trying to capture a good shot of them. I hope it would appeal to someone who’d never seen a Green Heron before and is unlikely to ever see one in nature.

Why don’t I feel nearly as attached to it as I do to the ones I took while out walking in the wild?