Subscribe: by Email | in Reader

Episode of Hands -- Hart Crane

Guest poem submitted by Mark Penney:
(Poem #1837) Episode of Hands
 The unexpected interest made him flush.
 Suddenly he seemed to forget the pain,--
 Consented,--and held out
 One finger from the others.

 The gash was bleeding, and a shaft of sun
 That glittered in and out among the wheels,
 Fell lightly, warmly, down into the wound.

 And as the fingers of the factory owner's son,
 That knew a grip for books and tennis
 As well as one for iron and leather,--
 As his taut, spare fingers wound the gauze
 Around the thick bed of the wound,
 His own hands seemed to him
 Like wings of butterflies
 Flickering in the sunlight over summer fields.

 The knots and notches,--many in the wide
 Deep hand that lay in his,--seemed beautiful.
 They were like the marks of wild ponies' play,--
 Bunches of new green breaking a hard turf.

 And factory sounds and factory thoughts
 Were banished from him by that larger, quieter hand
 That lay in his with the sun upon it.
 and as the bandage knot was tightened
 The two men smiled into each other's eyes.
-- Hart Crane
Where do you start with this beautiful poem?

Two men, described only through their hands, meet and briefly connect.  By
the way the hands are described, you know they're from vastly different
worlds, but both pairs of hands are beautiful (differently).  As the
front-office boy bandages the worker's wounded hand, a link of common
humanity is formed -- all wordlessly.  Each of them forgets who he is and
where he is, and simply becomes a fellow human being.  The bandage is, in
many ways, what knots them together.  That, and the smile, of course.

It has a certain feel of parable about it, starting with that epigrammatic
and unforgettable title, "Episode of Hands."

Of course, you're seeing the whole thing from the white-collar guy's point
of view -- Crane really did work in the front office of his father's factory
for a time -- so there are certainly questions you can ask: is it
politically too naive? is it, instead, elitist?  Also, I'd be remiss in not
pointing out that this poem is Exhibit A if you want to talk about Crane as
a gay poet, since here (for once) that particular subtext doesn't require
ridiculous leaps of logic to read in.  But you don't need to talk about any
of those things -- save that for the classroom.  As a reader, this stream of
quietly beautiful, creative images is enough.  Hands as butterflies.  Hands
as open fields, complete with horses running in them.  Hands as a microcosm
of what makes us human.

Notice also how the light -- striking the wound, as if washing it, filtering
in through the wheels (gears, etc., in the factory) -- is curative, and
seems itself to banish the sounds of the factory, to suggest or even create
the outdoor images that Crane uses.  Also, with the light comes a complete
absence of sound.  The bond between the two is almost necessarily wordless
-- a bandage, a shaft of light, an exchange of smiles.  The quiet of the
poem is palpable -- it's part of what makes it great.

I love Hart Crane like crazy, and this poem is one of the reasons why.

Mark.

49 comments: ( or Leave a comment )

Post a Comment