More from The Marginalian
The two great tasks of the creative life are keeping failure from breaking the spirit and keeping success from ossifying it. If you do attain success by the weft and warp of hard work and luck, it takes great courage to resist becoming a template of yourself that replicates whatever has garnered you acclaim in the past, continually lowering and lowering your willingness to take risks, narrowing and narrowing your locus of curiosity — that elemental building block of creativity. In 2005, while working as a designer at a branding agency, Debbie Millman — my onetime partner, now closest friend… read article
Loneliness is the fundamental condition of life — we are born by another, but born alone; die around others (if we are lucky and loved), but die alone; we spend our lives islanded in our one and only human experience — in these particular bodies and minds and circumstances drawn from the cosmic lottery — amid the immense ocean of time and chance teeming with all possible experience. Everything of beauty and substance that we make — every poem, every painting, every friendship — is an outstretched hand reaching out from one loneliness to another, reaching into the mute mouth… read article
It is in relationships that we discover both our depths and our limits, there that we anneal ourselves and transcend ourselves, there that we are hurt the most and there that we find the most healing. But despite what a crucible of our emotional and spiritual lives relationships are — or perhaps precisely because of it — they can be riddling and nebulous, destabilizing in their fluidity and ambiguity, leaving us grasping for the comforting solidity of categories and labels. The ancient Greeks, in their pioneering effort to order the chaos of the cosmos, neatly taxonomized them into filial love… read article
The question of what it takes to create — to make something of beauty and substance that touches other lives across space and time — is one of the deepest, oldest questions, perhaps because the answer to it is so unbearably simple: everything. We bring everything we are and everything we have lived to every smallest creative act — every experience, every dream, every memory, every unremembered impression, every unconsciously absorbed influence. The great bewilderment is that we can only access a fraction of our own everythingness — most of it dwells in the recesses of the mind and the… read article
The point, of course, is to make yourself alive — to feel the force of being in your sinew and your spirit, to tremble with the beauty and the terror of it all, to breathe lungfuls of life that gasp you awake from the trance of near-living induced by the system of waste and want we call civilization. Inside the system, these opportunities for raw aliveness are not easily found — they must be sought, seized, and then surrendered to. At four-thirty in the afternoon of June 17th, 1914, a month before the outbreak of WWI and five years before… read article
More in literature
Some wartime casualties are time-released. Death is deferred. In his new collection, That Mad Game (Scienter Press, 2025), R.L. Barth devotes three poems to a civilian, the war correspondent Albert W. Vinson, who wrote about him leading a patrol of Marines in Vietnam in 1968. The briefest appears in a section Bob calls “Snowfall in Vietnam: Poems/Maxims,” and is titled “Stringers: i.m. A.W. Vinson”: “The newsmen with guts.” Bob is extending the logic of his devotion to concision and composing a poem of four words. Vinson wrote a story about Barth’s patrol that was published on the Week End Feature Page of the Cincinnati Post & Times Star on November 16, 1968. Barth was from Erlanger, Ky., across the Ohio River from Cincinnati, and the story made him briefly a hometown hero. Vinson had served as a Marine during World War II and was seriously wounded by Japanese machine-gun fire. Only last year did Bob learn that Vinson had committed suicide in 1971. Bob includes “In the Mountains,” a three-poem sequence “in memory of Albert W. Vinson, who first placed these events on the record.” Finally comes “2nd Lt. Albert W. Vinson, U.S.M.C.,” subtitled “Talasea, New Britain 1944—Ononomowoc, WI 1971”: “Those Japanese machinegun rounds That shattered shoulder, legs, and arms Killed you as surely as, years later, The freight train on that lonely night.” Barth’s subject is not the history of the war in Vietnam. Rather, his focus is the impact that war had on the lives of young men born into safe, prosperous postwar America and thrown into a barbarous conflict without a coherent strategy, goal or widespread support at home. In his introduction to Vietnam: An Epic Tragedy, 1945-1975 (2018), Max Hastings writes “All wars are different, and yet the same.” In a section of his new collection titled “Coda: World Wars,” Bob includes poems dedicated to men who fought in previous wars. His is a poetry of remembrance, often across generations and centuries. Here is “Semper Fidelis: 1st MARDIV,” dedicated to Raymond Lawrence Barth (1921-2006), Bob’s father: “A combat knife, web belt, some photographs, Chevrons, dog tags, and medals: epitaphs For both the recent dead and one to die. While placing his mementos where mine lie In the top dresser drawer, I contemplate The tours of duty that they recreate: Jungle terrain, twenty-six years apart, Guadalcanal and I Corps, war’s grim art. Their future dispensation? Surely lost. There will be no one left who knew their cost.” Bob asked me to write a blurb for That Mad Game. It appears on the back cover: “Bob Barth has said he could talk to a Roman legionary – a fellow warrior. His poems are compact, artfully crafted, unsentimental and mindful of earlier soldier-poets. They are the shoptalk of a fighting man, a Marine patrol leader in Vietnam. He takes his title – ‘War, that mad game the world so loves to play’ -- from Jonathan Swift, who reminds us of those who ‘so dearly pay.’” Bob’s title is from Swift’s “Ode to Sir William Temple” (c. 1692): “War, that mad game the world so loves to play, And for it does so dearly pay; For, though with loss, or victory, a while Fortune the gamesters does beguile, Yet at the last the box sweeps all away.” Ours is a literary age in which most poems are stridently trivial and frequently incoherent. Bob writes with technical mastery of consequential things. Here is “Doughboys: Photograph c. 1917,” dedicated to Bob’s grandfather, Bernard Henry Benzinger (1894-1979), a World War I veteran: “Around a folded blanket seven doughboys Intently watch the dice turn six the hard way. Like pre-noir tough guys, three or four clutch sawbucks Half curled, ready to shell out or increase A conscript private’s base pay. One, raffish, Tilts his campaign hat like an old salt. All seven would shame Bogart with the angle Of dangling cigarettes and arched eyebrows. But they're not tough guys, just heartbreakers all, Stunning the viewer with impossible youth.”
The two great tasks of the creative life are keeping failure from breaking the spirit and keeping success from ossifying it. If you do attain success by the weft and warp of hard work and luck, it takes great courage to resist becoming a template of yourself that replicates whatever has garnered you acclaim in the past, continually lowering and lowering your willingness to take risks, narrowing and narrowing your locus of curiosity — that elemental building block of creativity. In 2005, while working as a designer at a branding agency, Debbie Millman — my onetime partner, now closest friend… read article