Of Silence and Song

Of Silence and Song

by Dan Beachy-Quick
Of Silence and Song

Of Silence and Song

by Dan Beachy-Quick

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Overview

Musings on joy and suffering, midlife and meaning, by a National Book Award–nominated poet and essayist praised for his “fine ear” (Publishers Weekly).

Midway through the journey of his life, Dan Beachy-Quick found himself without a path, unsure how to live well. Of Silence and Song follows him on his resulting classical search for meaning in the world and in his particular, quiet life. In essays, fragments, marginalia, images, travel writing, and poetry, Beachy-Quick traces his relationships and identities. As father and husband. As teacher and student. As citizen and scholar. And as poet and reader, wondering at the potential and limits of literature.

Of Silence and Song finds its inferno—and its paradise—in moments both historically vast and nakedly intimate. Hell: disappearing bees, James Eagan Holmes, Columbine, and the persistent, unforgivable crime of slavery. And redemption: in the art of Marcel Duchamp, the pressed flowers in Emily Dickinson’s Bible, and long walks with his youngest daughter.

Curious, earnest, and masterful, Of Silence and Song is an unforgettable exploration of the human soul.

Praise for the writing of Dan Beachy-Quick:

“Intelligent, compassionate, exquisite . . . a unique voice.” —Cole Swensen

“Rich, profound, fascinating.” —Los Angeles Times

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781571319432
Publisher: Milkweed Editions
Publication date: 10/05/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Dan Beachy-Quick is the author of six collections of poems; two previous works of nonfiction; and a novel, among other projects. He is a contributing editor for the journals A Public Spaceand West Branch. His work has won the Colorado Book Award, and has been a finalist for the William Carlos Williams Prize and the PEN/USA Literary Award in Poetry. He is currently a Guggenheim Fellow and a Creative Fellow of the Woodberry Poetry Room at Harvard University. He lives in Fort Collins, Colorado.

Read an Excerpt

1.

On our walk my youngest daughter asked me, “What are the songs you don’t know.”
“That’s a hard question,” I said.
“Tell me the songs you don’t know.”

[sb]

Silence was the best description.

[sb]

On the same walk we found a bird lying dead on the ground. It had a long, dark, slightly curved beak. Streaks of white not quite white on the head, a color I might call dry wheat. “Not a woodpecker,” I said. Iris said, “Nope, not a woodpecker.” Not the right markings. The shafts of the feathers had no bright colors. I couldn’t identify the bird. A plover? A snipe?

Later I asked Iris if the dead bird scared her.

“No,” she said. “It gave me an idea.”

* * *

2.

I had thought for years how best to begin.

[sb]

Maybe just a blank page.

[sb]

Some way of showing the precedent silence. But then I doubted so simple a gesture could make it felt: that silence. I worried the gesture would seem obvious. But then I remembered what’s most obvious is what I’m most interested in.

What the obvious hides in itself. Not as a secret. Like a breath being held.

Like a child believes in the dark and so doubts God, but every morning reverses the conclusions. Like doubt or faith when they begin in us by acting like one another. Only later do they act opposed.

The trouble is not that what is pure is complicated past our understanding. What’s quiet is just too simple to be understood. One method might be to liken that silence to the inner life once you learn to accept that the “inner life” is just another myth.

Socrates asks: Can a man know and also not know what he knows.

Know thyself. The imperative acts so simple, but then you try to follow the command for your whole life, as one might follow an echo back to a source, but the source is just a cave, and the shadows living there are quiet. And all along you thought you’d find yourself there. That you lived there. That you’d come home, source somehow of yourself. But it isn’t true.

In Greek, ἀληθείᾳ, the word for truth, might best be translated: “that which makes itself obvious.” There are other best ways to define it.

“The stone the builders cast out has become the cornerstone.” In Psalm 118:22 I found a comfort and a clue. I’d like to say that I repeated this verse to myself ceaselessly, but that would be a lie. I didn’t even know it mattered to me until I happened upon the words as a child happens upon a forgotten toy and remembers suddenly the life that had been in it. Mostly this experience happens to children when they become adults. I just found the words in the box. But the box was my head.

I needed to find the cast-out stone. That’s how to begin. I thought of the names of my daughters: Iris. Hana. Before they were born, before I had any inkling of their existence, they each were such a stone. But not now. Too many years have passed. My love for them isn’t silent. They do not fill me with silence. And what is silent in them is theirs alone. A rock cast away from me. Something I can’t pick up.

I thought of my wife, Kristy. But her silence is the prism that breaks white light into the rainbow.

I thought of a dream I had after I fell in love with Kristy and decided I must become a poet. In the dream I wandered down a dark road through a kept field. The grass all mown. I thought it was a cemetery but there weren’t any stones. A tree by a bend in the pitch-black asphalt, so black I knew it had been raining. That’s when I saw the rainbow. It kept still in the sky as I neared it. The closer I got the more intensely I could see the colors, and in the spectrum I saw lightning flashing like a sensation between synapses. So I imagined it. Going closer I could see the rainbow had no breadth, no depth; it was thinner than a razor. That’s when I saw the letter floating in the colors. Just one letter. It flashed, made of electricity. “It is the letter aleph,” I thought to myself. Then the lightning in the letter struck my hand and the pain woke me up. It wasn’t until years later, when I finally began to study Hebrew, that I realized I’d recognized the letter before I could have known it.

I gave Hebrew up. It took too much time away from writing poetry.

Fifteen years passed.

Now I’m studying Ancient Greek. Every hour I spend in declensions and conjugations deepens my sense of my own ignorance. It’s a kind of revelation, I guess. I’m not the student I thought I was.

To mark silence ( ) or * seemed like options for a while.

But the open-close parentheses began to seem like hands closing in prayer, or like hands circling a mouth that is unseen but open and about to yell out.

The asterisk—despite being that mark in Proto-Indo-European linguistics that marks the existence of an ur-word whose primary meaning undergirds and supports every iteration through time of every related word but whose proof etched in mud or in wax or on papyrus has never once been found—just felt like a notation that meant either to look up at the night sky at the grand silence of the stars, or to look at the bottom of the page for a note to help explain what might have been unclear in the text above. Usually, an allusion.

But what I want to point to isn’t in any direction because it’s in every direction.

Ubiquitous. Obvious.

Unavailable by the means at hand.

All.

* * *

3.

I want to ask a question about silence.

[sb]

The answer is in the disappearance of the question.

* * *

Riddles, Labyrinths

Asclepiades of Tragilus, a fourth-century poet, records the Sphinx’s riddle: “There is on earth a two-footed and four-footed creature with a single voice, and three-footed, changing its form alone of all creatures that move in earth, sky, or sea. When it walks on the most legs, then the strength of its limbs is weakest.” It’s likely he took the riddle from other authors who have slipped back into anonymity—by which I mean, I guess, that they fell back into time. I have to remind myself those poets had thumbprints like labyrinths unique to themselves, just as I have my own. But it is the riddle, whose answer for each of us is the same, that gets to have an identity more or less permanent.

The Sphinx seized and devoured young and old, large and small. A scholiast, writing about Euripides, notes: “But also the handsomest and loveliest of all, the dear son of blameless Creon, noble Haemon.” How blameless Creon is any reader of ancient tragedy can decide for herself. No one seems very blameless. We sense in the riddle some compulsion to answer, though we know it might be wiser to keep quiet. The words seem to contain a secret just as we ourselves seem to contain one. Mostly we fear what we want—that the answer will let the secret out, and somehow, as if by magic, we’ll be released by letting go of the answer we had contained.

The riddle seems immune to mortality, and though to answer wrong is to face death in the form of the Sphinx’s punishment, to answer correctly admits to the same fact: a man begins weak and gains strength only to become weak again. The riddle is deathless, even when the answer is death. Nor does answering correctly release you from the Sphinx’s crisis. It just presses in the air an invisible button called pause.

Words that, for many years, felt to me they admitted intellectual failure, have changed their nature: I don’t know. Now they seem to me words of spiritual honesty.

When I read Oedipus Rex I say to myself a silent prayer that this time Oedipus, brash man of brilliant mind, might reach the gates of Thebes and in answer to the Sphinx’s question say, I don’t know, and walk past the walled city that he does not know is his home.

But the prayer never comes true.

Today a milk-white butterfly landed on the lavender to take her fill of nectar, and the humble-bee scared her away to sip at the same blossom. I guess they heard the same question though it was silent to me, eating honey on toast.

Such strange hopes persist in silence. The grief substitute. The alternate.

*

Riddles riddle silence. Pierce it. Bewilder it by betraying it. It is as if a question had been asking itself forever without being heard, somewhere behind the mind or deeper than it, somewhere within the intangible reaches of soul, and then so gradually it escapes notice until it can no longer be ignored, the silent thing called out into voice. The riddle says, Tell me what you know, and when you do tell, you open your eyes to the fact that you don’t know what it is you know.

Wisdom makes the problem worse.

An apocryphal fragment written down by Pseudo-Plato and attributed to Homer speaks to the issue: “He knew a lot of things, but knew them all badly.”

We think we’re talking about others, but later see we’ve been speaking the whole time about ourselves. It’s disappointing even as it’s a revelation. Just another one of Fate’s riddles, even if fate is no more than realizing you are yourself and have been, without interruption, yourself your whole life—even as one late night you cried when you left behind your lovely wife holding to her fragrant breast your son because you needed to return to battle, and as she wept the child laughed to see the sun shine on the bronze helmet, but even then, I wasn’t Hector.

Nor was Homer, of whom such stories abound that he seems to both exist and not at the same time, as if he is one man of many voices and is also nobody at all. I like to return to the stories of his death. Pseudo-Plutarch writes: “Not long afterwards, when he was sailing to Thebes for the Kronia, which is a musical contest they hold there, he arrived at Ios. There, while sitting on a rock, he observed some fishers sailing up, and he asked them if they got anything. They (having caught nothing but for lack of a catch de-loused themselves) answered, ‘All we caught we left behind, all that we missed we carry.’ The riddle meant that the lice they had caught they had killed and left behind, but the ones they had not caught they were carrying in their clothing. Unable to work this out, Homer became depressed and died.”

Subtle variations abound. Homer, hearing the fisherboys, calls out: “O huntsmen from Arcadia, have we caught anything?” One answers with the same riddle, and in this account by Proclus, Homer, who best understood the mysteries of human hubris set against the myriad realities of the heart, could not find the answer. He became depressed, wandering around preoccupied by the riddle “and in this condition he slipped and fell on a stone, and died two days later.”

Of his blindness, there’s much to think but little to say, other than to mention that some authors suggest we make Homer blind to excuse our own blindness, for he saw more clearly than any man to ever live. He is blind because we cannot see.

Even such a man a riddle baffles.

More simply, from someone known only as Anonymous, “They say he died on the island of Ios after finding himself helpless because he was unable to solve a riddle of the fisherboys.”

Part of the riddle of Homer’s life is that all the biographical material is spurious past factual belief. He is in his way wholly anonymous, just as we are anonymous, or quietly on the way to becoming so. To wander through our days preoccupied by what makes to us no sense means we keep good company. It eases some the sorrow every riddle burdens us with, a weight I call sight-with-obscurity-included.

The Muses sang in my ear the rage of Achilles and the rites of Hector, tamer of horses. But a question a child asked has destroyed me.

Sing me the songs you do not know.

One is a song about lice.

*

But aren’t there other ways to think?

Riddle that doesn’t lead to death. Riddle that doesn’t seduce us into all those facts, damaged by desire, we call knowledge.

But, as Emily Dickinson says of eloquence, that it is when “the heart has not a voice to spare,” perhaps there is another kind of riddle one asks and answers oneself, not a work of words so much as a kind of deed doing and undoing itself forever, as night undoes day, and breath undoes breath.

At odd moments in life, waking up in the middle of the night and trying to find some trick to put my mind back to ease and sleep, I find myself thinking about Penelope weaving her shroud each day to keep her suitors at bay, and each night undoing the work.

She makes an image to cover up the face of death, and each night, undoes the image. The suitors must sense it. Death’s face all uncovered. It looks like nothing.

I like to think Penelope became so skilled in her art she could weave threads together with one hand while the other hand simultaneously took those threads apart. Her shroud might look like a thin black fragment briefly hovering in the air, thrilled occasionally by the gold thread of a star or the silver thread of water from a spring. But the whole could never be seen. It would be something like the trick of the famous philosopher who reportedly could write a question with one hand and with the other write the answer at the same time. But Penelope’s art would be finer, for she’d know the question and the answer are the same thing—one is just the disappearance of the other.

Unlike the Sphinx, this riddle kept men at bay, kept them silent, kept them apart from the “valor of action.” Not eliciting desire, her work put desire on delay, and by delaying desire, paused for many years the deaths of those she wanted to stop wanting her.

Such a riddle creates a rift in time. Beginnings and ends cease to oppose but become one. To do is to be undone. But there’s a strain of music. It’s just the hands working by themselves, sound of thread against thread, like the work of the Fates—if you can call that sound a sound it’s the only sound.

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