{"id":165812,"date":"2023-10-18T10:47:16","date_gmt":"2023-10-18T14:47:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/?p=165812"},"modified":"2025-10-08T17:14:15","modified_gmt":"2025-10-08T21:14:15","slug":"against-remembrance-on-louise-gluck","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2023\/10\/18\/against-remembrance-on-louise-gluck\/","title":{"rendered":"Against Remembrance: On Louise Gl\u00fcck"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"attachment_171928\" style=\"width: 1010px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-171928\" class=\"wp-image-171928 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/3gluck-cropped.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1000\" height=\"977\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/3gluck-cropped.jpg 1000w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/3gluck-cropped-300x293.jpg 300w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/3gluck-cropped-768x750.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-171928\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">COURTESY OF THE ESTATE OF LOUISE GL\u00dcCK AND POETRY MAGAZINE.<\/p><\/div>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Before I can think how to begin, she rebukes me: \u201cConcerning death, one might observe \/ that those with authority to speak remain silent \u2026\u201d (\u201cBats,\u201d <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">A Village Life<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">).\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Flip the pages, to\u00a0<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u201cLament,\u201d in\u00a0<i>Ararat<\/i>,\u00a0<\/span>and once more, a reproof:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Suddenly, after you die, those friends<br \/>\n<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">who never agreed about anything<br \/>\n<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">agree about your character.<br \/>\n<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">They\u2019re like a houseful of singers rehearsing<br \/>\n<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">the same score:<br \/>\n<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">you were just, you were kind, you lived a fortunate life.<br \/>\n<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">No harmony. No counterpoint. Except<br \/>\n<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">they\u2019re not performers;<br \/>\n<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">real tears are shed.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u00a0<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Luckily, you\u2019re dead; otherwise<br \/>\n<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">you\u2019d be overcome with revulsion.<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Those two lines\u2014a joke that hinges on being dead\u2014make me smile. A reflex, as I am also crying. And I think, as I often have, that Louise Gl\u00fcck wasn\u2019t given enough credit for being a funny poet. She is more commonly characterized as an investigator of death. Some find her poetry too skewed toward the grave; I wonder if we are too afraid of the fact that breath is the only thing keeping us out of it. To speak of her as if her death is the culmination of the work, though, is to ignore her attention to death\u2019s vast and fecund opposite, rife with pleasure, with suffering, dominated by silence though it produces much speech in defiance: living, in the present continuous. <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">To live<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> is the verb it\u2019s easy to forget you always embody. I stand. I walk around my bedroom. I worry the cuff of my gray wool sweater. I touch the petal of an Easter lily that opened just this morning. I remember that Louise prized completeness and detail when it came to natural things, so I walk back to my desk. On my laptop, I search the Latin name, <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Lilium longiflorum<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">. I smile again: my futile attempt to draw closer to her becomes a joke that hinges on death.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Back to the book. My past self has drawn a line in blue ink beside this stanza: \u201cDeath cannot harm me \/ more than you have harmed me, \/ my beloved life\u201d (\u201cOctober,\u201d <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Averno<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">). Is there anything else to say?\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">***<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">My first conversation with Louise was a total failure. We both thought so.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">You have to understand that I was in some essential way a feral creature, with that skittish hideaway instinct that comes from practicing survival. Though technically \u201chomeschooled,\u201d I was basically an autodidact: I\u2019d spent years reading my way through the library. Since early childhood, my father had terrified and beaten me. When, a little older, I started to resist his control, he also deprived me of language, keeping me in my room for days without books. He read my journals and punished me for my thoughts. At nine, I\u2019d started thinning myself compulsively. Then not just eating but talking became so difficult that I often could not answer direct questions. By twelve, I rarely spoke. My adolescence was silence, secret-keeping, desperate longing for a different future without the ability to imagine any future but death, which I expected would come to me young. You can see why I loved Louise\u2019s poetry.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">When she called me, I was eighteen, and had just been admitted to Yale, where she taught from 2004 until her death. I was at a gas station in Lancaster, Ohio, as far from poetry as anywhere could be. An unknown number, Cambridge area code. The admissions office, she said, had sent her the poems I\u2019d submitted with my application and asked her to talk to me. Neither of us, fortunately, ever remembered exactly what was said, but my terror of talking, and talking to <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">her<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, specifically, made me even less articulate than usual, and she, awkward in the face of awkwardness, faltered. \u201cI thought you hated me,\u201d she told me later. When I applied to her workshop at the beginning of my first semester of freshman year, I hoped she wouldn\u2019t remember me. She did. I became her student.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">She fascinated me. Her ability to extemporize in whole paragraphs. Her delphic certainty, a stated preference for the definite article, alongside an almost religious commitment to doubt, her sentences chained together by small temperings: \u201ca kind of,\u201d \u201cas if,\u201d \u201cit may be that,\u201d \u201cI think,\u201d \u201cI believe.\u201d And then\u2014<\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">bang<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u2014a proclamation I\u2019ll remember till I, too, no longer have memory. During office hours, I peeked at the labels of her clothes, which fell in luxurious folds of silk and wool and cotton and leather, black or gray or a dark green, and memorized the names of designers I looked up later. And I studied her mobile face while she read a poem: in those shifting expressions, a theater of perception and judgment before the lifted hand brought down the pen.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Sometimes, when she looked at me with a cool speculation or, other times, with a softness I named to myself as pity but did not resent because it seemed the gentle hand one experienced sufferer offers another, I felt as if I were watching her describe something to herself, the <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">something<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> being <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">me<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, and sometimes she did describe me to myself, her clarity having some of the heartlessness of a real oracle: \u201cYou love your mother and hate your father, and you hate that your mother still loves your father.\u201d The intensity of my desire to be seen matched the intensity of her seeing. She recognized my docility as a facade (obedience, never a quality she respected), and stoked the fire that burned it up. At least on the page, speech, choked by my father and then by myself, surged forth at her invitation\u2014no, her urging\u2014to speak.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u201cYou have the makings of a real poet,\u201d she told me that semester. Excited, as if she had made a rare discovery. I couldn\u2019t meet her gaze; the idea overwhelmed me. But it took root in my mind and, shyly, slowly flowered into a dream and then a pursuit. She often thought in oppositions: \u201creal\u201d pointed to its negative, \u201cfalse,\u201d which was a betrayal of the art. (In the same way, she often described a poem or a line as \u201calive,\u201d and though I do not remember her ever saying something was \u201cdead,\u201d I heard the unspoken problem.) \u201c\u2018Poet,\u2019\u201d she wrote in an essay about her own education, \u201cmust be used cautiously; it names an aspiration, not an occupation. In other words: not a noun for a passport.\u201d In her encouragement there was a warning, and a goad: You must do the making, Elisa, and the making goes on till you end.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">She rejected many of my lines (\u201cinert,\u201d \u201chopelessly conventional\u201d) but she never rejected my thoughts, no matter how cruel or deviant or strange. Often she anticipated the logic or the emotion, as if it were natural, at least comprehensible. In front of her, to her, for the first time in my life I could say anything.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">***<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The first time I read Louise\u2019s poetry, I was twelve and sitting on a concrete berm at a gas station in northern Ohio. Nearby, my mother was making clouds of steam by pouring cup after plastic cup of water into the van\u2019s radiator. My brothers and sisters played tag in a triangle of scrawny grass. Although my family didn\u2019t often buy books (expensive), for some reason we\u2019d recently visited a bookstore, where I chose <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The First Four Books of Poems<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> (four-for-one appealed to my sense of value). I\u2019d read poetry before, but it was this particular encounter with poetry, at dusk in high summer surrounded by the smell of gasoline, that remade me. Louise thought it funny\u2014it is funny\u2014that both of my introductions to her happened at Midwestern gas stations.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Her books, now piled beside me, encompass something like six decades of moods and situations. As a poet, she is both fixed and fluid. Change, I believe, was one of her deepest interests and drives. \u201cAs soon as I can place myself and describe myself\u2014I want immediately to do the opposite thing,\u201d she told an interviewer. Each book responds to some aspect of the previous. The distinctiveness of her lines\u2014the powerful clarity of her thoughts\u2014obscures, I think, that she is a master of personae, and it\u2019s possible, at least from <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Ararat<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> onward, to understand the books as both lyric and dramatic. The poems are made so subtly it\u2019s easy to miss that subtlety, like grandeur, is one of her modes. The lines people often quote, such as the closing couplet of \u201cNostos\u201d\u2014\u201cWe look at the world once, in childhood. \/ The rest is memory.\u201d\u2014resound because of their daring assurance. But that conclusion requires the preemptive undermining of the previous lines: \u201cFields. Smell of the tall grass, new cut. \/ As one expects of a lyric poet.\u201d (Again, she never gets enough credit for being funny.)\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">An abiding preoccupation, which compels the changes from poem to poem, voice to voice, book to book, is an anxiety about creation. Sometimes it emerges as an anxiety regarding form: finding a sufficient one, dealing with the consequences of fixing anything in words, which necessarily holds it still. Sometimes it is the fear, lurking or stated, that there will never be another poem.\u00a0 (\u201cI\u2019m talking too much,\u201d she said to me recently. \u201cBut you\u2019re our great poet of silence,\u201d I teased her.) The greatest anxiety, however, concerns whether the thing created\u2014the poem\u2014will do justice to creation itself.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">When I learned she had died, I was sitting on my bed, a red notebook in my lap. In that dazed rebellion that\u2019s grief\u2019s first incarnation, I wrote, <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">You wrote my life<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, and then I corrected, <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">You wrote all over my life<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, and then I corrected that correction: <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">You wrote all through my life<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, and now I correct with a line I know I\u2019ll correct again till I\u2019m dead, too: <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">You wrote me into my life<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u201cSentimental,\u201d I can hear her saying, with a grimace.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">***<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In the years since I met Louise as a person, not only as a poet, I\u2019ve felt as if we were bound by an affinity that did not always emerge from the best parts of either of our souls. That we both casually use the word <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">soul<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> is one piece of that affinity. But there was also a sharpness, a darkness, an ironic eye turned on the self and the world\u2014these tied us together as much as the appreciation of absurdity, the frustration with language, the fear of silence, the devotion to art, the passion for sensory experience and for passion itself, in its manifold forms. <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Manifold<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, a word that I associate with her, because its most perfect use may be in the first poem by her that I read, \u201cThe Drowned Children&#8221;\u2014who are forever lifted in the pond\u2019s \u201cmanifold dark arms.\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Louise had so many friends, so many students, and I suspect that many feel an analogous sense of affinity. Her perceptiveness made her, I think, unusually capable of forming intense connections. It could also (here, Louise, I offer a counterpoint, a harmony) make her unkindness especially devastating.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">When I look back, I trace what feels like her love for me. She read. She listened. She critiqued. She encouraged. She nagged. Her faith in me exceeded my faith in myself. She supported me during a psychiatric hospitalization, and after my brother\u2019s death. In turn I tried to love her, to understand her, to live, and to write.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">After I heard she was sick, and before I heard she died, I copied down a passage from <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Camera Lucida<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, in which Roland Barthes rebels against the application of any category to his specific grief over the absence of his specific <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">maman<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">: \u201cwhat I have lost is not a Figure (the Mother), but a being; and not a being, but a quality (a soul): not the indispensable, but the irreplaceable.\u201d My first, flailing, childish thought when she told me that she was ill: <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">I can\u2019t do this without you<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">. I still am not sure what I meant by <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">this<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> (poetry? life?) but I know what I meant by <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">you<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">. You, Louise, who would hate this whole thing.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">I last saw her\u2014how can \u201clast\u201d really mean \u201clast\u201d?\u2014at the end of August, when I spent a few days visiting her in Vermont. For much of that time we talked as I drove her through a landscape of a solid green fortified by the wild rains that had flooded Montpelier, and spoiled her garden. In a labyrinthine antique store, we sat for a couple hours in a matched pair of damasked armchairs, discussing the history of our relationships with beauty (in people, in objects, in the world). In Plainfield, I inched the car forward slowly enough for her to point out every place of past significance, and outside the house where she wrote <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The Wild Iris, <\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">we talked about our terror of how love works on the lover, how pathetic it makes you. When I began the long drive back to New York, we were in the middle of many conversations, which we said we\u2019d pick up soon, next time we saw each other, and the next time, when we would finish our conversations, then I would buy <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">her <\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">dinner, for a change, a really excellent dinner, appropriate to her gourmand taste. As I write this, the intervening time disappears. We are sitting across from each other at a dining table. Sunset behind her, which means night is already behind me. The silence that follows a bout of laughter has settled on us. The wine she chose is almost gone. She asks, \u201cDo you think anyone would expect us to laugh as much as we do?\u201d And because I am again answering, I know that she was right, in \u201cLament,\u201d to conclude that \u201cthis, this, is the meaning of \/ \u2018a fortunate life\u2019: it means \/ to exist in the present.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><i>Elisa Gonzalez is a poet, fiction writer, and essayist. Her debut collection of poetry is <\/i>Grand Tour<i>.\u00a0<\/i><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>&#8220;To speak of her as if her death is the culmination of the work, though, is to ignore her attention to death\u2019s vast and fecund opposite, rife with pleasure, with suffering.&#8221;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2240,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[27],"tags":[67827,20537,9801,1457],"class_list":["post-165812","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-in-memoriam","tag-featured","tag-in-memoriam","tag-louise-gluck","tag-teaching"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.4 (Yoast SEO v25.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Against Remembrance: On Louise Gl\u00fcck by Elisa Gonzalez<\/title>\n<meta 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