For the Coeur d'Alene
(after reading Sherman Alexie's War Dances)
Three Jesuit crows sat on a telephone wire,
talking trash about Alexie.
Jesuit #1: We must ask St. Ignatius to pray for his soul.
Jesuit #2: Oh, hell no.
Jesuit #3: Why not?
Jesuit #2: His soul is praying for us.
Jesuit #1: Ah, I once was blind but now I see.
September 4, 2013
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Note for Richard Wright's 105th Birthday
Note for Richard Wright’s 105th Birthday
In
1942, the psychologist Fredrick Wertham sent Richard Wright two verses, one on
January 15 and the other on May 27. The
haunting lines of the first
Where men have always looked around
And searched for secrets never found,
You saw a vision, dark, profound;
You heard beneath a distant sound;
You took the lid off the Underground.
are illuminated by the second verse entitled Underground
The Freudians talk about the Id
And bring it below
But Richard Wright took off the lid
And let us see the woe.
It is likely that the only works by Wright that Wertham
might have read before 1942 were Uncle
Tom’s Children, Native Son, and 12
Million Black Voices. His insights about Wright’s intellectual acumen are
germane in discussions of Wright’s fiction and non-fiction. Like William Blake, Wright was a visionary,
one who exposed deep recesses of human consciousness. One is not surprised that he discovered quite
early that Freudian theory might conceal as much as it reveals. Pulling off the lid and urging people to
ponder material and mental damages was Wright’s forte.
On September
4, 2013, I celebrate the presence and power of Richard Wright’s mind.
Jerry W. Ward, Jr.
Note for the
note: Wertham’s correspondence with
Wright is contained in the Wright Papers, JWJ Mss 3, Box 108, Folder 1677 at
the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.
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