|
|
|
Saving a Great Vision: Poet John Neihardt, by David L. Bristow. This article first appeared in Nebraska Life, July/August 2000. Eleven-year-old John Neihardt lay sick in bed,
feverish and hallucinating. In his mind, he seemed to be flying. "There was
vastness," he recalled many years later, "Terribly empty, save for a few lost
stars, too dim and wearily remote ever to be reached... When I cried out in desperation,
it seemed a great Voice filled the hollow vastness and drove me on. There was something
dear to be left behind, something yonder to be overtaken. Faster! faster! faster!" At first, it seemed like only a fever-dream,
without meaning. Had John Neihardt been an ordinary child, it might have stayed that way.
But for the precocious little boy in Wayne, Nebraska, this strange vision altered the
course of his life. Gradually, the dreams impersonal vastness came to represent a
mystical longing, a desire to be wholly absorbed in something larger than himself. He
became convinced that he had but a short time to live, and thatin order to justify
his own existencehe must accomplish "some worthy work that might compensate for
the potatoes he had eaten and the roofs that had protected him." And so John Neihardt became a writer. He had a little more time to work with than he
originally thought. When he died in 1973 at the age of 92, Neihardt left behind a
considerable literary legacy that is still being read, analyzed, and argued over to this
day. Among his most important works are Black Elk Speaksthe most influential
book of Native American spirituality ever writtenand A Cycle of the West, a
five-part epic poem that stands as a unique accomplishment in American literature. In recognition of his work, Neihardt has been
inducted into the Nebraska Hall of Fame, has been named Nebraskas poet laureate, has
been honored with his own statewide annual holiday (Neihardt Day, the first Sunday in
August), and memorialized at the John G. Neihardt Center in Bancroft. He appears, therefore, to have safely covered
the cost of any number of potatoes and roofs. And yet, despite all the honors, and despite a
loyal following of readers, the man who was once called "the American Homer" is
little known among his countrymen today, even among most Nebraskans. Though his usual
subject matterthe American Westis rich with fascinating stories and people,
his primary genrethe epic poemis an art form so thoroughly unmodern that even
in Neihardts day it seemed an anachronism. But Neihardt believed that through epic
poetrycombining the purity and economy of poetic language with the narrative drive
of storyhe could achieve his highest expression as an artist. He believed that the
story of the American West was the stuff of life itself, that men like Crazy Horse and
Jedediah Smith could achieve the same literary immortality as Achilles and Odysseus. Mike
Fink may have been a brawling, hard-drinking boatman, but Neihardt found poetry in him:
Then one saw What Neihardt was attempting was nothing less
than an American challenge to the European canon of classical literature. With
breathtaking audacity, he ignored the poetic fashions of his day in favor of his ancient
genre, ignored the critics in favor of his own artistic vision, and ignored the
countrys literary centers in favor of small Midwestern towns in which he could live
close to the land. "I developed a tremendous ego," he
admitted, "but it was a matter of self-preservation. All poets, all who accomplish by
being different, must develop egoism. When I assert myself, boldly praise something I have
done, it is never self-love, but self-denial that speaks. Have I not given a life to my
work?" In fact, Neihardt gave about 5,000
daysspread over 29 yearsto the writing of the Cycle.
It came quite unexpectedly in 1930, a meeting
that would change John Neihardts life. Traveling through South Dakotas Pine
Ridge Indian Reservation, Neihardt was doing research for The Song of the Messiah,
the final narrative poem of A Cycle of the West. The poem was to tell the story of
the ghost dance movement of the 1880s, and Neihardt wanted to find a few of the old
medicine men who remembered those times. He was directed to Black Elk, a 67-year-old
Lakota (Sioux) man who lived in an isolated, one-room cabin out on the plains. Black Elk spoke no English, so Neihardt brought
an interpreter and sat down with the old man to talk. "As I sit here," Black Elk said after
a long silence, "I can feel in this man beside me a strong desire to know the things
of the Other World. He has been sent to learn what I know, and I will teach him." That isnt what Neihardt had expected to
hear, but as Black Elk continued to talkmaking passing references to a mystical
vision that had come to him as a young manNeihardt began to realize that he was on
to something larger and more profound than he had anticipated. And Black Elk expected him
to record it in its entirety. "What I know was given to me for men and
it is true and it is beautiful," Black Elk said. "Soon I shall be under the
grass and it will be lost. You were sent to save it
." At Black Elks instruction, Neihardt
returned the following spring to learn the whole story of his life and vision. The result
was Black Elk Speaks, a strange and haunting narrative of Black Elks highly
symbolic visions during the last days of Lakota independence. In a 1979 preface to the
book, Vine Deloria, Jr.who is among the most prominent of contemporary Native
American writerssaid that the book had achieved among Indians the status of a
"North American bible for all tribes." Black Elk Speaks has achieved
international acclaim, has been translated into nine languages, and has recently been
named by publisher Harper San Francisco as one of the ten best spiritual books of the
century. But all that came later. Despite some favorable
reviews following its 1932 publication, Black Elk Speaks sold poorly, and was taken
out of print in less than two years. Ironically, John Neihardtepic poet and lover of
classical literaturehad written a book so far ahead of its time that it was for
years without much of an audience. In time, obscurity gave way to popularity, then
to controversy. Critics have disputed both the degree to which Neihardt may have shaped
Black Elks message, and also the very nature of Black Elks own spirituality
(he was a practicing Roman Catholic). But Pulitzer Prize-winner N. Scott Momaday, himself
a Native American, will have none of it: "It is sufficient that Black Elk Speaks
is an extraordinarily human documentand beyond that the record of a profoundly
spiritual journey, the pilgrimage of a people towards their historical fulfillment and
culmination, towards the accomplishment of a worthy destiny. That the pilgrimage was in a
tragic sense abruptly ended at Wounded Knee in 1890, that Black Elks words at last
take a tragic turnThere is no center any longer, and the sacred tree is
deadis of little consequence in the long run, I believe. For in that sudden
and absolute investment in the tragic, in the whole assumption of the tragic sense, there
is immeasurable vindication, the achievement of a profound and permanent dignity, an
irreducible impression on the records of human history."
Maxine Kessinger remembers the day when the
Bancroft library sold off all its books. "When television came on, the spark went
out of the library," she explains. By the late 1950s, the little library finally
closed its doors, selling off its entire collection for 25¢ a book. It was a sad state of
affairs for the town that John Neihardt had called home from 1900 to 1921. Some of the books were sold to the Bancroft
school library, but not all. At the book sale, Kessinger noticed a stack of
Neihardts books on a table, still unsold, and pointed this out to the school
librarian. "Dont you want those books?"
Kessinger asked. "No," the librarian replied curtly,
"Weve got all the books we want." In miniature, that incident pretty well sums up
John Neihardts Bancroft reputation throughout the 20th century. Always
something of an oddity in the northeast Nebraska community, Neihardt attracted both
admirers and detractors. "As a writer, he didnt do
real work, a real mans work," explains Nancy Crump, Director of the
Neihardt Center in Bancroft. "Not in a way that a rural, frontier community would
consider. He wasnt a farmer, rancher, a blacksmith, so he didnt do any real
workhe sat and scribbled all day." By all accounts, Neihardt was a warm and
personable man, but one who was never quite respectable in the eyes of many of his fellow
citizens. It wasnt any one thing. In addition to his writing, there was his artist
wife, his socialist politics, his unconventional spiritual beliefs, and his respect for
Native Americans and their culture. But mostly, perhaps, there was the sheer
impracticality of his lifehis relative poverty and lack of monetary ambition, his
mountains of books, his long walks, and his overall childlike zest for life. A neighbor like that can get on your nerves. Neihardt was a dreamer and idealist living
among practical people. Though he was no stranger to hard, physical labor, he always
looked for something beyond the mundane struggles of life, looked for something higher and
holier. Such is the nature of art. For this, he was revered by some and resented by
others. Even years after his departure from Bancroft, when Maxine Kessinger went home with
an armload of Neihardt books nobody else wanted, the tension remained. And then came the 1960s. With Black Elk
Speaks back in print and steadily gaining an audience, John Neihardtnow in his
80sfound his literary reputation on the rise. Meanwhile, back in Bancroft, the
little one-room cabin Neihardt had used as a study had become a dilapidated eyesore. But
in 1967, a local woman named Evelyn Vogt began leading an effort to restore the little
building as an historic landmark. She soon enrolled a number of Bancroft residents,
including Maxine Kessinger, in the task of raising support for the project. "People thought we had rocks in our
heads," Kessinger recalls. "It was a big project. They had to clear off the
shrubs, the weeds, the debris." The study was in such bad shape that it had to be
disassembled and "restored board by board. It would have been easier to tear it down
and build a new one, but then we wouldnt have had an authentic buildingand
its now listed in the National Register of Historic Places." Energized by their success with the study, the
John G. Neihardt Foundation, as it was now known, began making plans for a new building, a
historical and culture center dedicated to preserving Neihardts legacy. They wrote
letters, lobbied state senators, and in 1974over the governors
vetosecured funding to build the Neihardt Center. What had once seemed like a crazy,
thoroughly impractical idea, turned out to be Bancrofts main tourist attraction. Today, the Neihardt Center is open to visitors
year-round. As Neihardt wished, the Centers mission is primarily educational. Its
annual Spring Conference features scholarly presentations on a variety of subjects related
to Neihardts interests. Neihardt Day, in August, is an annual outdoor celebration in
the poets honor. As dedicated to the legacy of Black Elk as to
that of Neihardt, the Neihardt Institute of Vision and Learning (a branch of the
Foundation) has recently launched a program targeting Nebraskas Native American
students. The Neihardt/Black Elk Young Writers Workshop allows selected Native students to
explore their potential as writers. The Institute also sends speakers to Nebraska schools
and adult groups, on topics ranging from Neihardts writings to Native American
history. Throughout all this is a belief that the work
of Nebraskas epic poet still matters in a fast-paced, computerized world. It
isnt always an easy sell. Trouble is, as a people we have become superficial readers
(those of us who read at all), and we tend to judge our books solely by their
entertainment value. But Neihardt believed that the power of language and the power of
story was greater than that. He believed that through language he could not only entertain
his readers, but also educate them and transform them. "What is education," he
wrote late in life, "but the process of expanding the individual consciousness to
include as much of race consciousness as possible, with universal sympathy as the ideal
achievement?" This ideal can be seen even more clearly in The
Song of the Messiah, the final poem of A Cycle of the West. The poem is the
story of the Ghost Dance movement of 1889-90, a religious revival among various native
tribes that combined elements of Christianity and native religion. Central to the poem is
a vision of the end of this world and the birth of the next:
All the living things, "And that was heaven," Neihardt once
explained. "They lost their little dreams and wakened all together. That is what we
are striving for today and we never quite make it. But when at the moment of love, when
two people lose their little dreams, and waken together, thats it... Maybe someday
well do it."
Books by John Neihardt Of more than thirty Neihardt volumes in print,
here are a few of the best. All are currently published by University of Nebraska Press.
John G. Neihardt Center, Bancroft, Nebraska Off Highways 77, 51, and 16 in northeastern
Nebraska. 888-777-4667. Center hours are Monday-Saturday 9:00-5:00, Sundays 1:30-5:00,
large groups by appointment. Admission is free. Copyright ©2000 David L. Bristow www.davidbristow.com |