THE CORTLAND REVIEW  

 HOME

DEWAYNE RAIL (2) - MARCH 1999 FEATURE  

  

The Cortland Review

FEATURE

DeWayne Rail
Muffy Bolding interviews Fresno poet DeWayne Rail.

John Kinsella
Access Visit/s - The next chapter in John Kinsella's autobiography series at TCR.

Bruce Canwell
The final installment of Writers on Writing.

Dewayne Rail's Signature


continued from page 1

Interview with DeWayne Rail

back to page 1


You tell of a poet, of some time ago, who used to perpetually maintain a bowl of over-ripened apples; the poet would then set these on his desk before him as he sat down to write... for it was solely that specific aroma—sweet and funereal—which somehow inspired him to compose his best work. Do you have any rituals that you employ when sitting down to write a poem?

I think that was Schiller. As I remember it, he would leave an apple in his desk, so that it would rot and give off that sweet odor when he sat down to write. I've always loved that story. Yes, I'm as ritualistic as they come. For one thing, I have to write poems by hand and in a bold, dark ink. Flair pens are wonderful, but they can't have a fine point. I have to have a certain kind of notebook, or the poems just don't look right. I really need coffee nearby, and in a nice cup. You can't write beautiful poems while drinking from an ugly cup. I used to smoke, and damn, I hated giving that up. Well, this could get boring, but rituals should be taught in workshops.

In your class, you also tell a marvelous story about a former student being inspired to write a most extraordinary poem after noticing a small freckle on his hand one day—pondering its creation and its impact on the future. What is the most seemingly insignificant thing that has ever compelled you to write a poem?

Years ago, I was driving home from work one day when I saw a crow in the middle of the road. He seemed to be guarding a small puddle of water. Since he wouldn't move, I stopped. He squawked at me and wouldn't budge. I watched him awhile, and we had what amounted to a conversation, though neither of us spoke the other's language. Then I backed up the car and went around him and drove on home. Right after that I wrote a poem called The Field of Crows, and, as a matter of fact, crows find their way into my poems pretty regularly.

To whom do you show your work before sending it out, if anyone?

Right now I don't show poems to anyone while they are in draft. When the poet Don Jones Lived in Fresno, we used to meet and show each other our poems once a week. He was a very good critic. He moved, and for a time I met with Ernesto Trejo very regularly to trade poems. He was so enthusiastic and encouraging that it gave me a real boost.

Many of your more recent poems make mention of aging, and the passage of time. What, poetically speaking, do your eyes see different now that they did not, say, 30 years ago?

The passage of time, yes. I'm acutely aware of that now. I'm more aware of the comedy of it all, I think, and of the terror of the situation, to borrow a phrase from Gurdjieff. Poetically speaking, I see the paired opposites of most situations very quickly, so that I am always aware of having a kind of double-vision. For example, I see the beauty and the absurdity of a human trying to maintain some kind of dignity in a difficult situation. Seeing things this way makes me laugh a lot, sometimes in situations where it doesn't seem appropriate, but it is really only a manifestation of my appreciation. I have that same double-vision about this interview, for example. Why should anyone care? And yet...

How do you view the onset and emergence of online publishing in poetry?

I'm excited by the possibilities of online publishing. I just love the radical egalitarianism of it all. Can you imagine what a boost online publishing would have been for the poets of the past? Shakespeare? The French Surrealists? John Keats? And why not for us? Doesn't that make the poles of your psyche wobble, just to think about it?

In what direction do you see poetry moving in the future?

I have no idea, no clue. I think it is as unpredictable as the stock market, or, more likely, as unpredictable as genius. Search the prophecies of Nostradamus or the Book of Revelations. I think that even as we speak the Great Poet is among us, ready to lead us in a direction that seems wrong to us in our blindness.

What are your thoughts on the criticism that conventional poetry has lost its "edge", and has degenerated into either a refuge for frozen, rote, threatened academics... or a venue pandering mainly to literary self-interest groups (i.e. feminism, culturalism, victimism, etc.)? What "isms" can you suggest that might give American poetry a good, swift, much-needed kick in the ass?

Well, things are always degenerating, and, at the same time, something new is arriving. The "isms" are pretty boring whether you encounter them in ersatz poetry, in politics, or in conversation. But there is so much good stuff being published right now. Or am I being misled by the three or four books I am reading? What scares me is not the state of our poetry, of our art, but the state of our popular culture.

When you stick your hand into a bag of bread... do you skip over the heel?

Yes. When I was a kid I had the theory that you should eat the dessert of a meal first, then proceed to your next favorite thing, and so on. My reasoning was that the world might end suddenly, or you might die of a heart attack, and you would have maximized your possibilities while still in the body, so to speak. My mother just wouldn't buy in to the theory, but I still think it makes a lot of sense. In fact, when I think of how young I was when I first proposed and defended this theory, I have a new respect for myself. It's right in there with Mill and Bentham.

If you could have a dinner and salon with any five poets or writers—from now or in the past—who would you choose, and what would you eat?

This is difficult, but: Kit Marlowe, Rabelais, Baudelaire, James Joyce, and John Keats. Wouldn't the words and images just fly? I just wouldn't say anything at all, and John Keats would probably be pretty shy. But think of Joyce and Rabelais, their enormous heads filled to capacity, and witty Marlowe, who would at last get credit for having written the Shakespeare plays, and the acid tongue of Baudelaire. They would probably wind up killing each other eventually, but until they did it would be grand. And home cooking—they would love the food.

Who and what are you reading right now?

I am reading Questions About Angels, by Billy Collins, a book about London in the time of Chaucer, a book about the savings and loan rip-off of a few years ago, an historical mystery novel by Iain Pears, and The Conspiracy Reader, by the editors of Paranoia Magazine. All good stuff. I read several books at the same time, and I read a lot at night, so the books I am reading change rather rapidly. I'm having a storage problem. I can't stand to get rid of books.

Besides the possibly portentous word "exile", do you have any other favorites in the English language?

I'm a cheap drunk with words. I remember getting high on the word "the" when I was about three. I would say the word over and over to myself, and suddenly I would sort of disassociate, you know. My head would feel enormous, and I would get dizzy. In one of his letters, Dylan Thomas asks a friend if he doesn't think "aerodrome" is the most beautiful word in the English language. Not a bad choice. Lately I've become enamored of "tolling." Isn't that just a beauty?

Your son, Evan, is quite successfully making his own name as a poet. Do you think your life and your work have influenced him at all—in much the same way, perhaps, that your own father influenced you?

Well, I certainly hope I have influenced him. Not to (after raising him) would be odd, to say the least. Yeah, I can see the influence in his language, and, in fact, in the language of all four of my children. My two girls will call me up from, say, New York or Los Angeles, or my youngest boy will be talking, and sometimes they will say something in that metaphorical backwoods way. It's comical, really, because they are both aware of what they are doing and unable to say it any other way. It's a good thing. I think Evan sees it as a positive thing in his own poems. The kids influence me, too. They are always passing on things to read, for example. They discover the good writers for me now, and the girls, especially, are always trying to make me less backwards, more couth.

To make mention of the use of poetry as a way to liberate and exalt our own humanity (and strictly as a display of brazen pretentiousness), I shall now proceed to invoke Kafka, who once said, "Art should serve as the axe for the frozen sea within us." Do you agree with this statement?

Well, now I want to ask Kafka to come to dinner. That's a wonderful, stunning statement. It spoils the pithiness of it, but I want to add "and the frozen sea around us." I do think art leads us to better places and to better versions of our unfinished selves. I have always said that my discovery of poetry in college saved my life. People always misunderstand and think that I was depressive and on the verge of suicide. I was never depressive, and suicide was never attractive to me. But I was lost in our culture, you know. The commercial gaudiness of it, the religious fanaticism, the self-righteous arrogance of people, the stunning self-centeredness of everyone—it was all killing me. It's corny to say, maybe, but poetry changed my life.


back


Interview with DeWayne Rail
TCR 1999 March Feature

DeWayne Rail's poetry in Issue Six

 

top

� 2002 The Cortland Review