Robinson Jeffers



John Robinson Jeffers (10 January 1887 – 20 January 1962) was an American poet, whose poetry often presented monist perspectives, transcending personal and particular concerns of human beings, which he eventually labelled as stances of a naturalistic "inhumanism" that he believed was necessary to transcend and diminish many forms of social strife and corruption.

Quotes


A mighty mountain swept o'er by the bleak Keen winds of heaven'''; and, standing on that peak Above the blinding clouds of prejudice, '''Would we could see all truly as it is; The calm eternal truth would keep us meek.'''
 * '''O that our souls could scale a height like this,
 * A Hill-Top View (1904); This is one of his earliest poems, printed in the Aurora, a student publication of Occidental College.

The ocean swelled for a far storm and beat its boundary, the ground-swell shook the beds of granite. I gazing at the boundaries of granite and spray, the established sea-marks, felt behind me Mountain and plain, the immense breadth of the continent, before me the mass and double stretch of water.
 * At the equinox when the earth was veiled in a late rain, wreathed with wet poppies, waiting spring
 * "Continent's End" in Tamar and Other Poems (1924)

You were much younger when we crawled out of the womb and lay in the sun’s eye on the tideline. It was long and long ago; we have grown proud since then and you have grown bitter'''; life retains Your mobile soft unquiet strength; and envies hardness, the insolent quietness of stone.
 * '''The long migrations meet across you and it is nothing to you, you have forgotten us, mother.
 * "Continent's End" in Tamar and Other Poems (1924)

Older and harder than life and more impartial, the eye that watched before there was an ocean.'''
 * '''The tides are in our veins, we still mirror the stars, life is your child, but there is in me
 * "Continent's End" in Tamar and Other Poems (1924)

Before there was any water there were tides of fire, both our tones flow from the older fountain.
 * Mother, though my song's measure is like your surf-beat's ancient rhythm I never learned it of you.
 * "Continent's End" in Tamar and Other Poems (1924)

Challengers of oblivion Eat cynical earnings, knowing rock splits, records fall down, The square-limbed Roman letters Scale in the thaws, wear in the rain.
 * Stone-cutters fighting time with marble, you fore-defeated
 * "To The Stone-Cutters" in Tamar and Other Poems (1924)

they have had what they wanted
 * Happy people die whole, they are all dissolved in a moment,
 * "Post Mortem" in The Women at Point Sur (1927)

Cries to the power that moves the stars, "I have come home to myself, behold me. I bruised myself in the flint mortar and burnt me In the red shell, I tortured myself, I flew forth, Stood naked of myself and broke me in fragments, And here am I moving the stars that are me." '''I have seen these ways of God: I know of no reason For fire and change and torture and the old returnings.'''
 * He takes it in the naked ecstasy; it breaks in his hand, the atom is broken, the power that massed it
 * "Apology for Bad Dreams" in The Women at Point Sur (1927)

I think it is our privilege and felicity to love God for his beauty, without claiming or expecting love from him. We are not important to him, but he to us.
 * I believe that the Universe is one being, all its parts are different expressions of the same energy, and they are all in communication with each other, therefore parts of one organic whole. (This is physics, I believe, as well as religion.) The parts change and pass, or die, people and races and rocks and stars, none of them seems to me important in itself, but only the whole. This whole is in all its parts so beautiful, and is felt by me to be so intensely in earnest, that I am compelled to love it and to think of it as divine. It seems to me that this whole alone is worthy of the deeper sort of love and there is peace, freedom, I might say a kind of salvation, in turning one's affections outward toward this one God, rather than inwards on one's self, or on humanity, or on human imaginations and abstractions — the world of spirits.
 * Letter to Sister Mary James Power (1 October 1934); published in The Wild God of the World : An Anthology of Robinson Jeffers (2003), edited by Albert Gelpi, p. 189; also partly quoted in the essay "Robinson Jeffers, Pantheist Poet" by John Courtney

(An office of tragic poetry is to show that there is beauty in pain and failure as much as in success and happiness.)
 * I think that one may contribute (ever so slightly) to the beauty of things by making one's own life and environment beautiful, as far as one's power reaches.This includes moral beauty, one of the qualities of humanity, though it seems not to appear elsewhere in the universe. But I would have each person realize that his contribution is not important, its success not really a matter for exultation nor its failure for mourning; the beauty of things is sufficient without him.
 * Letter to Sister Mary James Power (1 October 1934); published in The Wild God of the World : An Anthology of Robinson Jeffers (2003), edited by Albert Gelpi, p. 189 - 190

'''Oh pale and brittle pencils ever to try One grass-blade's curve, or the throat of one bird That clings to twig, ruffled against white sky.''' Oh cracked and twilight mirrors ever to catch One color, one glinting flash, of the splendor of things.
 * I hate my verses, every line, every word.
 * "Love the Wild Swan" (1935)

Better bullets than yours would miss the white breast Better mirrors than yours would crack in the flame. Does it matter whether you hate your. . . self? '''At least Love your eyes that can see, your mind that can Hear the music, the thunder of the wings. Love the wild swan. '''
 * This wild swan of a world is no hunter's game.
 * "Love the Wild Swan" (1935)

Many high tragic thoughts Watch their own eyes.
 * Here is a symbol in which
 * "Rock and Hawk" in Solstice and Other Poems (1935)

To hang in the future sky;''' Not the cross, not the hive, But this; bright power, dark peace; '''Fierce consciousness joined with final Disinterestedness; Life with calm death; the falcon’s Realist eyes and act Married to the massive Mysticism of stone, Which failure cannot cast down Nor success make proud.'''
 * '''I think, here is your emblem
 * "Rock and Hawk" in Solstice and Other Poems (1935)

To know that great civilizations have broken down into violence, and their tyrants come, many times before. '''When open violence appears, to avoid it with honor or choose the least ugly faction; these evils are essential. To keep one's own integrity, be merciful and uncorrupted and not wish for evil; and not be duped By dreams of universal justice or happiness. These dreams will not be fulfilled. '''
 * Then what is the answer? — Not to be deluded by dreams.
 * "The Answer" (1936)

the whole remains beautiful.''' A severed hand Is an ugly thing and man dissevered from the earth and stars and his history... for contemplation or in fact... Often appears atrociously ugly. Integrity is wholeness, the greatest beauty is Organic wholeness, the wholeness of life and things, the divine beauty of the universe. '''Love that, not man Apart from that, or else you will share man's pitiful confusions, or drown in despair when his days darken.'''
 * '''Know that however ugly the parts appear
 * "The Answer" (1936)


 * There is no reason for amazement: surely one always knew that cultures decay, and life's end is death.
 * "The Purse-Seine" (1937)


 * You ask what I am for and what I am against in Spain. I would give my right hand of course to prevent the agony; I would not give a flick of my little finger to help either side win.
 * Response in a pamphlet Writers Take Sides : Letters About the War in Spain from 418 American Authors  (1938) by the American Writers League, which asked various authors: "Are you for or are you against Franco and fascism?".

The sword: an obsolete instrument of bronze or steel, formerly used to kill men, but here In the sense of a symbol.'''
 * '''Reason will not decide at last; the sword will decide.
 * "Contemplation of The Sword" (1938)

stars, but also the cruelty and greed, the treacheries And vileness, insanities and filth and anguish: now that this thing comes near us again I am finding it hard To praise you with a whole heart.
 * Dear God, who are the whole splendor of things and the sacred
 * "Contemplation of The Sword" (1938)

to make earth.
 * I sadly smiling remember that the flower fades to make fruit, the fruit rots
 * "Shine, Perishing Republic" (1939)

shine, perishing republic.'''
 * '''Meteors are not needed less than mountains:
 * "Shine, Perishing Republic" (1939)


 * Corruption never has been compulsory; when the cities lie at the monster's feet there are left the mountains.
 * "Shine, Perishing Republic" (1939)

insufferable master. There is the trap that catches noblest spirits, that caught — they say — God, when he walked on earth.'''
 * '''And boys, be in nothing so moderate as in love of man, a clever servant,
 * "Shine, Perishing Republic" (1939)

And bound to be worse before it mends'''; Better lie up in the mountain here Four or five centuries, While the stars go over the lonely ocean...
 * '''The world's in a bad way, my man,
 * "The Stars Go Over The Lonely Ocean" (1940)

And the dogs that talk revolution''', Drunk with talk, liars and believers. ''' I believe in my tusks. Long live freedom and damn the ideologies.'''
 * '''Keep clear of the dupes that talk democracy
 * "The Stars Go Over The Lonely Ocean" (1940)

Is nothing new. That America must accept Like the historical republics corruption and empire Has been known for years. '''Be angry at the sun for setting If these things anger you.'''
 * That public men publish falsehoods
 * "Be Angry At The Sun" (1941)

Man plays his part; the cold passion for truth Hunts in no pack.'''
 * '''The gang serves lies, the passionate
 * "Be Angry At The Sun" (1941)


 * The first part of "The Double Axe" was written during the war and finished a year before the war ended, and it bears the scars; but the poem is not primarily concerned with that grim folly. Its burden, as of some previous work of mine, is to present a philosophical attitude, which might be called Inhumanism, a shifting of emphasis and significance from man to not-man; the rejection of human solipsism and recognition of the transhuman magnificence. It seems time that our race began to think as an adult does, rather than like an egocentric baby or insane person. This manner of thought and feeling is neither misanthropic nor pessimist, though two or three people have said so and may again. It involves no falsehoods, and is a means of maintaining sanity in slippery times; it has objective truth and human value. It offers a reasonable detachment as rule of conduct, instead of love, hate and envy. It neutralizes fanaticism and wild hopes; but it provides magnificence for the religious instinct, and satisfies our need to admire greatness and rejoice in beauty.
 * Preface to The Double Axe and Other Poems (1948)

I was continually writing verses in those days. Nobody, not even I myself, thought they were good verses; but Aurora's editor accepted many of them and it gave me pleasure to see my rhymes in print. They did rhyme, if that is any value, and were usually metrical, but why was I so eager to publish what hardly anyone would read and no one would remember? '''I suppose the desire for publication is a normal part of the instinct for writing... the writer sits at home, and the mere fact of being printed provides his verses with a kind of audience... So, having his vanity partially satisfied, he can go ahead and try better work.'''
 * When I first went to Occidental College... there was a literary magazine...called the Aurora, and I remember thinking it odd that Occidental — the west, the setting sun — should be represented by a magazine called Aurora, the dawn. At least it gave us a wide range, the whole daylight sky.
 * Letter to a group of Occidental College students (1955)

Tall dreary men lying on the hills all night Watching the stars, let their dogs watch the sheep.''' And I'll have lunatics For my poets, strolling from farm to farm, wild liars distorting The country news into supernaturalism — For all men to such minds are devils or gods — and that increases Man's dignity, man's importance, necessary lies Best told by fools.
 * '''I will have shepherds for my philosophers,
 * "The Silent Shepherds" (1958)

Run parallel to reality, they symbolize it, they squint at it, They never touch it''': consider what an explosion Would rock the bones of men into little white fragments and unsky the world If any mind for a moment touch truth.'''
 * '''Science and mathematics
 * "The Silent Shepherds" (1958)

Dante's Florence, no anthropoid God Making commandments: this is the God who does not care and will never cease.''' Look at the seas there Flashing against this rock in the darkness — look at the tide-stream stars — and the fall of nations — and dawn Wandering with wet white feet down the Carmel Valley to meet the sea. These are real and we see their beauty. The great explosion is probably only a metaphor — I know not — of faceless violence, the root of all things.
 * '''He is no God of love, no justice of a little city like
 * "The Great Explosion" in the posthumous publication The Beginning and the End (1973)


 * Come little ones, You are worth no more than the foxes and yellow wolfkins, yet I will give you wisdom. O future children: Trouble is coming; the world as of the present time Sails on its rocks; but you will be born and live Afterwards. Also a day will come when the earth Will scratch herself and smile and rub off humanity: But you will be born before that. Time will come, no doubt, When the sun too shall die; the planets will freeze, and the air on them; frozen gases, white flasks of air Will be dust: which no wind ever will stir: this very dust in dim starlight glistening Is dead wind, the white corpse of wind. Also the galaxy will die; the glitter of the Milky Way, our universe, all the stars that have names are dead. Vast is the night. How you have grown, dear night, walking your empty halls, how tall!
 * The Double Axe and Other Poems, including eleven suppressed poems (1977) II.The Inhumanist XLV


 * Poetry is bound to concern itself chiefly with permanent aspects of life.
 * As quoted in Encyclopedia of World Literature in the 20th Century (1981) edited by Leonard S. Klein, Vol. 2, p. 504


 *  I decided not to tell lies in verse. Not to feign any emotions that I did not feel.
 * The Selected Poems of Robinson Jeffers, Stanford University Press (2001) ISBN 978-0804738903

One thinks there were the ages of stone and the age of bronze And the iron age; iron the unstable metal; Steel made of iron, unstable as his mother; the towered-up cities Will be stains of rust on mounds of plaster. Roots will not pierce the heaps for a time, kind rains will cure them, Then nothing will remain of the iron age And all these people but a thigh-bone or so, a poem Stuck in the world's thought, splinters of glass In the rubbish dumps, a concrete dam far off in the mountain...
 * When the sun shouts and people abound
 * "Summer Holiday"

This beautiful place defaced with a crop of suburban houses — How beautiful when we first beheld it, Unbroken field of poppy and lupin walled with clean cliffs; No intrusion but two or three horses pasturing...
 * The extraordinary patience of things! 
 * "Carmel Point"

Not faintly. It has all time. It knows the people are a tide That swells and in time will ebb, and all Their works dissolve.''' Meanwhile the image of the pristine beauty Lives in the very grain of the granite, Safe as the endless ocean that climbs our cliff. — As for us: '''We must uncenter our minds from ourselves; We must unhumanize our views a little, and become confident As the rock and ocean that we were made from.'''
 * '''Now the spoiler has come: does it care?
 * "Carmel Point"

We built our house when I and my love were young.'''
 * '''Against the outcrop boulders of a raised beach
 * "The Last Conservative"

But the place was maiden, no previous Building, no neighbors, nothing but the elements, Rock, wind, and sea; in moon-struck nights the mountain Coyotes howled in our dooryard; or doe and fawn Stared in the lamplit window, We raised two boys here '''All that we saw or heard was beautiful And hardly human.''' Oh heavy change. The world deteriorates like a rotting apple, worms and a skin. They have built streets around us, new houses Line them and cars obsess them — and my dearest has died. The ocean at least is not changed at all, Cold, grim, and faithful; and I still keep a hard edge of forest Haunted by long gray squirrels and hoarse herons.
 * The rock-cheeks have red fire-stains.
 * "The Last Conservative"

Perhaps of my planted forest a few May stand yet''', dark-leaved Australians or the coast cypress, haggard With storm-drift; but fire and the axe are devils. '''Look for foundations of sea-worn granite, my fingers had the art To make stone love stone, you will find some remnant.''' But if you should look in your idleness after ten thousand years: It is the granite knoll on the granite And lava tongue in the midst of the bay, by the mouth of the Carmel River Valley; these four will remain In the changes of names. You will know it by the wild sea-fragrance of the wind.
 * '''If you should look for this place after a handful of lifetimes:
 * "Tor House"

plunging like dolphins through the blue sea-smoke Into pale sea — look west at the hill of water: it is half the planet: this dome, this half-globe, this bulging Eyeball of water, arched over to Asia, Australia and white Antarctica: those are the eyelids that never close; ''' this is the staring unsleeping Eye of the earth; and what it watches is not our wars.'''
 * Here from this mountain shore, headland beyond stormy headland
 * "The Eye"

Quotes about Jeffers

 * Alphabetized by author


 * His spiritual insights were in three major areas: First, he has inspired mankind to see the world anew as the ultimate reality. Second, he perceived and described the physical universe itself as immanently divine. And finally, he challenged us to accept the ultimate demands of modern science which assign humanity no real or ultimate importance in the universe while also aspiring us to lives of spiritual celebration attuned to the awe, beauty and wonder about us.
 * John Courtney, Vice-President, of the Tor House Foundation, in "Robinson Jeffers - Pantheist poet"


 * Robinson Jeffers was no scientist, but he expressed better than any other poet the scientist's vision. Ironic, detached, contemptuous like Einstein of national pride and cultural taboos, he stood in awe of nature alone.
 * Freeman Dyson, The Scientist As Rebel (2006)

I felt in his presence almost as if I stood before another and nobler species of man whose moods and ways would remain as inscrutable to me as the ways of the invading Cro-Magnon man would have seemed dark to the vanishing Neanderthals. In later and more mature years I have met cleverer vocalizers and more ingenious intellects, but I have never again encountered a man who, in one brief meeting, left me with so strong an impression that I had been speaking with someone out of time, an oracle who would presently withdraw among the nearby stones and pinewood. Jeffers had always been different from others, but in Carmel something happened that exaggerated the differences. What was the source of the lightning that struck him? Whatever it was, it came from a cloud that settled over him soon after he moved to Carmel. … Something utterly wild had crept into his mind and marked his features. I cannot imagine him as having arisen unchanged in another countryside. '''The sea-beaten coast, the fierce freedom of its hunting hawks, possessed and spoke through him. It was one of the most uncanny and compete relationships between a man and his natural background that I know in literature.'''
 * I met and spoke with Robinson Jeffers on the road beyond his door. The circumstances have long faded from my mind except for the haunting presence of his features, lined and immobile as a Greek mask. I have also a rough memory that he spoke casually and without heat, of being called for jury duty in a homicide case, and having been rejected by the defense because of the cruelty of his countenance. The eyes looked at me as he spoke, not with amusement, but with the remote, almost inhuman animal contemplation that marks his work and that very obviously had aroused the mistaken animus of the defense counsel.
 * Loren Eiseley, in an essay in the Sierra Club Bulletin (1965) as quoted in Not Man Apart : Lines from Robinson Jeffers (1974) by David Ross Brower, p. 146; also in Robinson Jeffers : Poet of California (1995), p. 32, and Yuga : An Anatomy of Our Fate (2005) by Marty Glass, p. 239


 * Jeffers was a very strange man and poet, with an enormous component of cruelty and violence in his work. He had incredible sympathy with animals. He could give you an animal in a word or two like very few poets can. I think he honestly felt them, even though he often perceives them through violence. I can't explain Jeffers, he has always awed and annoyed me. I'm grateful to him as one of my predecessors writing about California. Even as a teenager, I knew he had California right. The poem that most reveals Jeffers's self-hatred is the one about the cavemen who torment a mammoth to death. They trap it and roast it alive. He's full of this kind of disgust for humanity. Yet he soars out into a great vision; never a happy vision, but a great vision. He's a difficult case when you're talking about animals.
 * 1994 interview in Conversations with Ursula Le Guin


 * The sheer magnificence and vastness of the coastal environment — an epitome of the true wilderness of the world — stood as a reminder that all human life is a mere flicker within something unimaginably greater. Jeffer's western wilderness was a key to perceiving the essential wildness of the universe as a whole, in which human personality is only something like a lichen on a rock. No tall heroics for Jeffers.
 * Thomas J. Lyon, as quoted in The Oxbow Man : A Biography of Walter Van Tilburg Clark (2006) by Jackson J. Benson, p. 77


 * I knew all the poets-their poems-when I was quite young. (Who were your favorites?) G.P.: I loved Robinson Jeffers. I loved Auden, I loved H.D.
 * 1981 interview in Conversations with Grace Paley edited by Gerhard Bach & Blaine Hall (2013)


 * Perhaps the earliest one that I remember is Robinson Jeffers, who of course was not an Indian poet. But some of the first published poetry I was ever exposed to was his and that was important to me, and I think it was my first sense of being able to think in terms of putting a poet in a landscape that's familiar, because the area that he was writing about was where I grew up-the northern California and central California coast. That was an early influence.
 * Wendy Rose interview in Survival This Way: Interviews with American Indian Poets by Joseph Bruchac (1987)


 * To Robinson Jeffers the earth was hopelessly prostrate.
 * Louis Untermeyer, in A Concise Treasury of Great Poems p. 476