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Lindbergh gets a little more attention than he deserves; the fate of the pop
celebrity, I suppose. Many more deserving intellectuals espoused isolationism, though they are long-forgotten now. Lindbergh's fate is, however, a reminder of how dangerous it can be to go against the political tides. Another, more significant and serious example of this is the poet Robinson Jeffers, once vastly popular, but condemned to obscurity by his opposition to US foreign policy. He could write about incest and bestiality and make the cover of Time magazine, but once he wrote, in his poem "Pearl Harbor," such lines as, ".... The men who have conspired and labored to embroil this republic in the wreck of Europe have got their bargain--and a bushel more...." and "....The war that we have carefully for years provoked Catches us unprepared, amazed and indignant. Our warships are shot Like sitting ducks and our planes like nest-birds, both our coasts ridiculously panicked, And our leaders make orations...." he was professionally dead and his popularity crashed, never to fully recover. Like Lindbergh, he hovered around the edges of the culture after the war, a figure from a past era whose continued presence seems to have made people uncomfortable. Jeffers was compared by Freeman Dyson to Einstein, not just because of his political and social vision but also his desire to discover a broader, truer sense of the universe and our place in it. Environmentalists like David Brower were drawn to him, and scientists like Loren Eisley; great historians of religion like Joseph Campbell and Huston Smith were avid students of Jeffers; and the photographers Ansel Adams and Edward Weston rooted their understanding of the sublime in nature, which they tried to capture in their art, in their reading of Jeffers. Of Tor House, the home in Carmel that Jeffers built for his strikingly beautiful wife Una with his own hands, stone by stone, incorporating such things as a meteor fragment and a stone from Ossian's grave, Stewart Brand, who wrote the classic "How Buildings Learn," said it was "the most intelligent building per square inch ever built in America." None of that mattered once Jeffers raised his voice against US foreign policy. I don't expect A&E, that citadel of intellectualism, to ever run a story on Robinson Jeffers, but he and Lindbergh seem to have had a lot in common, at least in their political views (I believe Lindbergh was also a proto-environmentalist like Jeffers). And they shared a common fate as losers in a vastly important debate on the position the US should play in the world. None of this is ancient history as the US is at a strikingly similar crossroads as it redefines its place in the world post 9-11. In Lindbergh's time, the opposition was a branch of the Republican party. This time the opposition is a branch of the Democratic party. That's about all that has changed. Chris Mark |
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