David Wagoner, prolific poet of the Northwest, is dead at 96

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David Wagoner, prolific poet of the Northwest, is dead at 96
He found his subjects in nature, his childhood and many other realms. He also wrote novels full of lively dialogue.

by Neil Genzlinger



NEW YORK, NY.- David Wagoner, a leading figure in poetry circles, especially in the Pacific Northwest, who turned a keen eye on nature, his childhood and numerous other subjects in more than 20 volumes published across half a century, died Dec. 18 at a nursing home in Edmonds, Washington. He was 96.

His wife, Robin Seyfried, confirmed the death.

Wagoner, who taught for decades at the University of Washington, also wrote novels, one of which, “The Escape Artist” (1965), about a teenage magician, was turned into a 1982 movie starring Griffin O’Neal. But he was best known for poetry. In 1991 he won the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, one of the most prestigious in the field.

In 1991, poet Rita Dove, one of the judges in the Lilly competition, told The Seattle Post-Intelligencer why she thought Wagoner deserved that prize.

“He has never imitated himself,” she said. “He has always moved in deeper directions; he has always been exploring something new.”

Wagoner was a conservationist and an enthusiastic hiker, finding awe in the landscapes of the Northwest but also sometimes lamenting humanity’s cavalier treatment of nature. “Lost,” a 1972 poem that recommended taking a quiet pause in a forest, drew on both sentiments and ended this way:

No two trees are the same to Raven.

No two branches are the same to Wren.

If what a tree or a bush does is lost on you,

You are surely lost. Stand still. The forest knows

Where you are. You must let it find you.

But nature was only one subject among many. Wagoner’s novels, many of them adventure yarns about young people, sometimes drew comparisons to Mark Twain for their colorful dialogue and humor, and his poems too could have a sly streak. One, included in the 2008 collection “A Map of the Night,” was called “Trying to Write a Poem While the Couple in the Apartment Overhead Make Love” and began with these lines:

She’s like a singer straying slowly off key

while trying too hard to remember the words to a song

without words, and her accompanist

is metronomically dead set

to sustain her pitch and tempo, and meanwhile,

under their feathers and springs, under their carpet,

under my own ceiling, I try to go on

making something or other out of nothing

Some of his most moving poems were personal stories — his first trip to the movies; being fascinated with a dead snake as a child. Among the best known of those, “Their Bodies,” was inspired by his parents’ decision to donate their bodies to science. It began with an epigraph: “To the students of anatomy at Indiana University.” A professor there, Wagoner once said, would read it to students at the start of the semester. The poem ended this way:

They had been kind to others all their lives

And believed in being useful. Remember somewhere

Their son is trying hard to believe you’ll learn

As much as possible from them, as he did,

And will do your best to learn politely and truly.

They gave away the gift of those useful bodies

Against his wish. (They had their own ways




Of doing everything, always.) If you’re not certain

Which ones are theirs, be gentle to everybody.

David Russell Wagoner — his whimsical poem “Anagrams” noted that the name is an anagram for No Avid Walrus Gelders — was born June 5, 1926, in Massillon, Ohio. When he was 7 the family moved to Whiting, Indiana, an industrial area near Chicago, and his father worked for decades in the steel mills there.

He began writing poems in grade school.

“I have no idea why,” he said years later. “Certainly not because I was reading a lot of poetry or knew anyone who wrote it.”

While earning an undergraduate degree at Pennsylvania State University, he studied under poet Theodore Roethke, who became a mentor. Wagoner earned a master’s degree at the newly established graduate writing program at Indiana University in 1949, then taught at DePauw University in Indiana and Penn State and worked as a reporter at The Hammond Times in Indiana.

Soon he had published “Dry Sun, Dry Wind” (1953), a book of poems and monologues. John Ciardi, reviewing it in The New York Times, wrote, “Mr. Wagoner knows how to see both the thing precisely and the thing in relation.”

Roethke had moved to the University of Washington in 1947, and on his recommendation, the university hired Wagoner in 1954; he spent the rest of his career in the English department there, taking emeritus status in 2002.

The Northwest, he said, was a startling change from Indiana. “On my first solo excursion into rough country,” he said in a 1972 interview with the journal Crazy Horse, “I only needed five minutes to get lost in the woods.” He had plunged into the dense forest “as though I expected to be met by God,” he said.

“But the god turned out to be Pan,” he continued, “and when I’d finished my panicky circles in his honor a few hours later, I clung to my rediscovered steering wheel and was no longer a Middle Westerner.”

Wagoner edited the journal Poetry Northwest from 1966 to 2002, publishing countless poets there, both established and new. Many other aspiring poets went through his classes at the university, and he was a champion of the art form.

“Those who do without poetry should imagine their lives without music — they are missing that much by missing poetry,” he told The Post-Intelligencer in 1991. “We don’t think the same way after Wallace Stevens, T.S. Eliot, William Carlos Williams or Theodore Roethke, just as we don’t see the same sights out our window after Picasso. Poets change the nature of reality for everyone.”

In addition to his wife, whom he married in 1982 (it was his third marriage), he is survived by their two daughters, Alexandra and Adrienne Wagoner, and a sister, Jeanne Howarth.

Wagoner’s 2013 collection, “After the Point of No Return,” includes a poem inspired by a line in “Letters to a Young Poet,” a selection of letters by the poet Rainer Maria Rilke published in 1929. The poem is called “A Letter to an Old Poet”:

Do you still believe, old man, you are a poet?

If so, what you must do is so obvious,

you shouldn’t need reminding. You should keep trying

to do whatever you haven’t done, or start

doing again what you didn’t manage to do

right in the first place. You should stay alive

as often as possible and keep yourself open

to anything out of place and everything

with nowhere else to go, to carry what’s left

of your voice out and beyond, into, over,

and under, past, within, outside, between,

among, across, along, and up and around

and to be beside yourself when the spirit moves you

and to thank Miss Clippinger for your prepositions.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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