Citing a line from Elizabeth
Bishop??The bight is littered with old correspondences??Scott Cairns avers:
?So, also, is my mind.?
Indeed,
it was Bishop's ?The Bight??encountered late in his undergraduate
education?that may have first alerted Cairns to one, key, salutary fact of
literary history: virtually every work written over the centuries has been to
some degree a responsive text, something of an epistolary response to what the
writer beholds?the landscape, the heavens, or?as in most cases?another prior
text.
In
addition to volumes by Coleridge, Keats, Bishop, Dickinson, Frost, Stevens, and
Auden, Cairns keeps collections by his beloved Greeks?Kavafy, Elytis, and
Seferis?on his writing desk. In corresponding with them, he engages some of the
profound and recurring themes of his distinguished career: the mystery of
creation (and its absent/present Creator), the sense that every word?every
term?proves to be less a terminus than a point of departure, and a vision of
inexhaustible Love transcending all apparent limits, all neat binaries,
including that of heaven and hell. These poets have served as his mentors, his
provocateurs, and?in his mind at least?his primary audience.
Correspondence
with My Greeks is a work at once deeply human and
hauntingly transcendent, the full flowering of the poet's lifelong devotion to
the generative power of the word.