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Thank You Jeffrey Brown of PBS News Hour

Stephen Kuusisto to appear on PBS News Hour
Image: Logo of PBS News Hour

Tonight the PBS NewsHour will air a segment about my new book Have Dog, Will TravelThe piece features an interview with Jeffrey Brown whose reporting on literature and poetry is well known to book lovers across the nation. Jeffrey is also a poet whose first collection The News is available from Copper Canyon Press. In our time together we talked about poetry, civil rights, disability culture, dogs for the blind, the field of disability studies, and the power of literature to bring people together around social justice movements. And yes, there’s a lovely dog, Caitlyn, a sweetie pie yellow Labrador from Guiding Eyes for the Blind.

The program airs locally, in Syracuse at 7 PM. Check your local listings.

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Stephen Kuusisto and HarleyABOUT: Stephen Kuusisto is the author of the memoirs Have Dog, Will Travel; Planet of the Blind (a New York Times “Notable Book of the Year”); and Eavesdropping: A Memoir of Blindness and Listening and of the poetry collections Only Bread, Only Light and Letters to Borges. A graduate of the Iowa Writer’s Workshop and a Fulbright Scholar, he has taught at the University of Iowa, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, and Ohio State University. He currently teaches at Syracuse University where he holds a University Professorship in Disability Studies. He is a frequent speaker in the US and abroad. His website is StephenKuusisto.com.

Have Dog, Will Travel: A Poet’s Journey is now available:
Amazon
Prairie Lights
Grammercy Books
Barnes and Noble
IndieBound.org

Have Dog, Will Travel by Stephen Kuusisto

(Photo picturing the cover of Stephen Kuusisto’s new memoir “Have Dog, Will Travel” along with his former guide dogs Nira (top) and Corky, bottom.) Bottom photo by Marion Ettlinger 

D.H. Lawrence and the Blind Kid

I fell in love with D. H. Lawrence as a high school student. His poems reached me first; then the essays. I don’t know if it matters what kind of reader I was back then. We spend so much time pre-fronting our subjectivities nowadays but yes I was legally blind. I read what I could get via long playing records and tapes from the Library of Congress. I listened slowly and in more than ordinary solitude. (It wasn’t possible in those days to hear a record while sitting under a tree.) I received my Lawrence in dark rooms.

When I entered college in 1973 I found no one was teaching Lawrence. He was considered a kook. At best he was a polemicist for psychoanalysis and at worst a pornographer but in any case professors assured me he was nothing more. If you wanted an English moralist you were instructed to read Hardy.

The photo on my freshman I.D. shows a boy-child who was 5′ 6" tall and weighed 102 pounds. I’d barely survived a bout of adolescent anorexia. I started reading poetry in the hospital. I read this:

“The Uprooted"

People who complain of loneliness must have lost something,
lost some living connection with the cosmos, out of themselves,
lost their life-flow
like a plant whose roots are cut.
And they are crying like plants whose roots are cut.
But the presence of other people will not give them new, rooted connection
it will only make them forget.
The thing to do is in solitude slowly and painfully put forth new roots
into the unknown, and take root by oneself.

Of course I read all the poems of Lawrence I could find in recorded formats. "The Ship of Death" with its Egyptian incense, "The Snake" and the lesser known "Almond Blossom":

“Trees suffer, like races, down the long ages.
They wander and are exiled, they live in exile through
long ages
Like drawn blades never sheathed, hacked and gone black,
The alien trees in alien lands: and yet
The heart of blossom,
The unquenchable heart of blossom!”

If you’re lonely by circumstance and you’re in "alien lands" then you’ve got to make something of it. You must believe the "unquenchable heart of blossom" is the signature of all things.

Lawrence was disabled. Like so many people born in the latter part of the 19th century he had tuberculosis. He was born on September 11, 1885. He was ten years younger than Thomas Mann who’s canonical novel "The Magic Mountain" offers the best description of the social psychology of TB.

No one has written with greater lyric urgency and intelligence than Lawrence about the side by side flames of soul and death. And yes eventually they become one flame but our work is different for now. We must adore them both:

“Medlars and Sorb-Apples"

I love you, rotten,
Delicious rottenness.

I love to suck you out from your skins
So brown and soft and coming suave,
So morbid, as the Italians say.

What a rare, powerful, reminiscent flavour
Comes out of your falling through the stages of decay:
Stream within stream.”

Jeffrey Meyers writes in his excellent biography of Lawrence:

“Lawrence’s life and character were strongly influenced by the progress of his disease. He had (at various times) all the symptoms of consumption, which intensified toward the end of his life. He suffered from irregular appetite, loss of weight, emaciation, facial pallor, flushed cheeks, unstable pulse rates, fever, night sweats, shortness of breath, wheezing, chest pains, frequent colds, severe coughing, spitting of blood, extreme irritability and sexual impotence. The toxemia of Lawrence’s lungs influenced the state of his mind and provoked febrile rages. As John Keats had told Fanny Brawne, emphasizing the gulf between the sick and the well: “A person in health as you are can have no conception of the horrors that nerves and a temper like mine go through.” Witter Bynner wrote of Lawrence’s stoic attitude but uncontrollable anger: “He had never given me any evidence of his illness by complaint in words or faltering in spirit but only by bursts and acts of temper.”

One supposes Bynner wasn’t much of a reader when it came to Lawrence’s poetry since poem after poem stills us, stands us on the by turns dark, then evanescent unseeable line between living and dying; between apprehension and the vatic. Here’s the end of
“Medlars and Sorb-Apples":

“Sorb-apples, medlars with dead crowns.
I say, wonderful are the hellish experiences,
Orphic, delicate
Dionysos of the Underworld.
A kiss, and a spasm of farewell, a moment’s orgasm of rupture,
Then along the damp road alone, till the next turning.
And there, a new partner, a new parting, a new unfusing into twain,
A new gasp of further isolation,
A new intoxication of loneliness, among decaying,
frost-cold leaves.”

"Parting, partner, infusing, twain," "a new gasp of further isolation."

This is conceivably the greatest description of disability as lived experience at the center of the body as ever you’ll find.

AI Helps Uncle History Write a Poem About Sadness

AI Helps Uncle History Write a Poem About Sadness

“The kettle boils
A door somewhere
Doesn’t close all the way
Outside, the trees are doing
What trees do
And it is almost unbearable”
Now just now
Does he take up his pen
Now just now
Does he find
It has no ink
He recalls a joke:
“Why do the pens
In banks
And post offices
Never work?
Because
When you chain a pen
It loses its will to live”
But right now
The dog is asleep
And the light is the color
Of forgetting
And Uncle lets himself
Be the room that holds it all—
The quiet, the not-knowing
The hum the world makes
When it forgets he’s listening

“Hedgehog or fox…”

“Hedgehog or fox?”
Uncle History
Thinks its foolish
He knows
Sentience
Ain’t a critter
Nor is it a god
Not a metaphor
Not Whitman’s grass
It’s only
A pinched curve
Where words
Slip through
Like amoebas
“Carpal consciousness”
And if
You don’t have arms
There’s a tight bend
At the top
Of the spine
Where thoughts glide
Like flattened swans
Swan-thoughts
Are never obedient
To Isaiah Berlin
Though its rumored
The do like musicians

A Brief Moment in Disability History

A Brief Moment in Disability History

When Antonio Gramsci was a child
His family tied him up in a harness
And hanged him from the rafters
They were going to
“Straighten him out”
“Rimetterlo in riga”
(He was short and bent)
“Non possiamo permetterlo”
“We can’t have that”
How his bones (tubercular)
Must have ached
How, in agony, suspended
He must have seen birds
Through the proscenium
Of the barn’s door
Italian sparrows
With their calls
Like dropped pennies
Little chirps
While dipping in air
And after this
He didn’t need to learn
Anything more

Uncle History listens to poets…

Uncle History listens to poets
Who complain they’re having writer’s block
He doesn’t understand it
As they say nowadays
(And rightly)
This is privilege
Jung said
“Everything we think
Is the fruit
Of the middle ages”
Just soak your feet
In blood, Uncle
Wants to say
But where matters
Of exsanguination
Are concerned
He knows its best
To keep silent
As so many writers
Are frightfully literal

Aunt History’s Radio

For psychotherapy
Aunt History turns on her radio
And listens to Smolensk
It’s the thin desperate voices
She loves
The ones speaking
Of abandonment
Though she doesn’t
Call it that—human beings
Just getting by
Talking in the dark
Words bouncing
Against the curve
Of earth
It’s not therapy exactly
Babble
Like the rain
Heard in a tent
They’re speaking of wheat
Right now
Talking to no avail
No avail at all…

Uncle History and His Metal Detector

Uncle History
(With his metal detector)
Stomps into the fields
Searching for false teeth
(They’re always
Made of wire and bone)
He hums a haiku
In his head—
Teeth bone wire under-
Ground trinkets for the dead ones…
Then he steps on a potato
Beep beep
“Call the dogs!” he shouts
“There’s a dead man here
Wearing a suit of armor
“Right there
Under the tubers!”
Its hard to give up
On chivalry
When you’re 5000 years old
You want the earth
To be heroic
You want…

Today’s Sadness

Today’s Sadness

Is brought to you
By the toxic ideas complex
With its pills
And thousands upon thousands
Of caged animals.
Call the dentist
You’ve been grinding your teeth
But he’s trapped also
Its like Dante, everyone
Up to his or her neck
In a self loathing bath
And down at the peace and harmony shop
They’re eating butterfly wings…

Uncle History misses the hurdy gurdy man

Uncle History misses the hurdy gurdy man
With his bingity bangity thump—
That old cart rolling to a stop
Under his window
And then turning the crank
To play pure sadness
The sadness
Of air
Of wheels and grass
The music
Beloved by Hieronymus Bosch
In his “Garden of Earthly Delights”
You can feel the manic tears
Of parishioners
Exiting church
To the stink
Of rotting potatoes
October
And strings vibrating