Page 4-Sunday, November 13, 1977-The Michigan Daily Poetic justice: Pro f. Hall The Michigan Daily-Sunday, Novei inds the good life Photo by STEVE KAGAN Hall in Ann Arbor.. . UTHER KENNESTON gazed across the muddy road toward Eagle Pond late one summer afternoon in 1938, recalling how his father had trudged over just' such a sloppy path to train with the local militia during the Civil War. Nine-year-old Luther had been afraid that his father Ben- jamin would leave New Hampshire for Virginia some evening, never to return. Nine-year-old Donald Hall, up for a few months from Connecticut to visit relatives and hay the fields, sat motionless beside his great-uncle Luther, squinting to see his vision of tired farmer-soldiers slapping at big summer flies as the men headed home from rifle practice. Five such Eagle Pond summers would pass before the young man would turn these inspirations into poetry 6 a.m. coffee and long dawn experiments with verse. Luther, the country minister, died in 1941. Donald graduated from Eagle Pond sum- mers to Exeter College, Harvard, Oxford, and eventually, the University of Michigan, where he spent 17 years as resident bard and- professor.# With 25 years of academia behind him, Donald Hall has gone back to the land of his youth to practice his cherished:-craft, for good. And after all those years of studying and teaching English, Hall and his wife, Jane Kenyon, couldn't be happier, writing poetry near Danbury, New Hampshire. When the professor and his wife came out to Danbury in 1975 to the rented house of his ancestors, it wasn't to found a home, but to get away from the rigors of Angell Hall on a year's leave. He accepted a second year of- fered by an English Department eager to retain its most renowned Fellow, though before the first year was up, Hall had decided to break away from the University, give up tenure, and take up full-time poetry at 47. Hall spent a semester commuting to nearby Dartmouth to teach a course but, he says, "I realized I would rather stay at home, not talk to anyone, and rewrite a single poem seven times than give one lec- ture." While "there's no inherent contradiction between the act of teaching which opposes poetry," Hall explains, he decided to devote himself to the work that has won him two Guggenheim Awards and space in periodicals like The New Yorker, theNew York Times Book Review, The Atlantic, and the Saturday Review. New Hampshire is an endless list of town- ships and-communities, assembled as though the constituents decided to make up for what they lack in size with confusion. Hall's property officially, lies within the limits of Wilmot, the telephone exchange is in Andover, the church down the road to which Donald and Jane belong sits in South Danbury, and the mail is delivered only if addressed to Danbury. Donald Hall comes out onto the porch of his two-story white farmhouse at the bottom of Ragged Mountain, a wide smile playing across his face. He is a poetic Santa Claus-wearing the tired, intense eyes of a poet, softened by an unrestrained beard which frames his round face. Hall smiles often, both in mirth and irony, and he has reason to smile. "For the first time in my life," he says, settling his heavy frame into a stuffedi ivingroom chair, "I am no longer thinking about the future. For for- ty years I sustained myself by daydreaming about the future; it's a wonderful thing to realize all of a sudden that you can live in the present." As if outlining it for the first time, the poet reflects that all through his college years'-first as an undergraduate at Exeter College in New Hampshire, then as a Fellow at Harvard and Oxford, and finally as a professor at Michigan-his sights were_ fixed on his next project or vacation, his life dragged along by the future. Now delighting in his present, photographs of his ancestors stare in stead- fast irony across the living room at each other. Hall's great-grandfather, John Wells, who bought the house at the turn of the cen- tury hangs in a place of honor above his progeny, his neat white beard in sharp con- trast with Hall's of deep brown. Evading the pressures of the future, Hall has embraced the comfort of the past in his grandparents'old farmhouse, The house Hall bought last year sits on the By Brian Blanchard edge of Ragged Mountain, a steep hill thick with trees whose orange and red colors have faded slightly in a month of rain. The road neatly divides the property; on one side is the house, an old unpainted barn, and a fallen-in maple sugar shack that, says Hall, produced thousands of gallons of syrup during the early years of the century. On the other side of the highway is a slow slope down to Eagle Pond-more a lake-where Hall fishes and swims during the summer. Looking to the east is Mount Kearsarge, shrouded in clouds on rainy days. The-poet and his wife seem to take great pride in the landscape around the house, pointing to this or that landmark, always returning to Kear- sarge, "Great blue mountain! Ghost," as he describes it in one poem. Hall has various relatives scattered around the area, giving him even more reason to feel an attraction to the land. They drop by occasionally; one second-cousin brings the piles of wood they store in a clut- tered addition to the house, for cold winter nights. There have been a few additions to the house since it was built in 1803, but the door frames still tilt with a handcrafted, un- parallel appeal. When they bought the house, Donald and Jane installed an old wood-burning stove in the kitchen so that the house is entirely heated by wood. Everywhere there are relics from the past. "It's not that they were collectors, you understand," grinned Hall, knee-deep in old baby cribs and boxes of every description, "they just never threw anything away." On one wall hangs a Temperance Cer- tificate signed by his grandmother who died two years ago without, as far as her gran- dson knows, ever having broken the pledge: This is to certify that Kate Kennes- ton has signed the Corner Stone of'Temperance of the New Ham- shire State Temperance Union, promising to abstain for Life, the Lord helping. 21 September 1885 Hall proclaims he is "not beholding to anyone." But listening to him describe his regimen and list his Drojects. one might revising for the fiftieth time. Each kept in a bulging folder, a diar progress from a scribbled though tinkerings of the final drafts. " usually means cut," he says, explai tendency is to include too much det first drafts. Of his own work, Hall observes, balance is towards sound. I mighit wrong word rather than the ri because I like the sound of it." Hall has never really finished ap so he says. "You give up on a poe you publish it." Hall alters his po ween editions "trying to get themr usually takes about three years f time he takes up the idea for a poe time he "gives up" for his readers. But the final word on what the rea see rests only in part with Hall. Fo ce, the "Ox Cart Man" was publis recent New Yorker, but what appea only a fraction of the poem Hall subn the magazine. After the ox cart man to his home".., by fire's light in No cold ..." there should be several ad stanzas describing the rebuilding of he uses to haul produce to Por market; the stanzas aren't there. 'T Yorker also rejected a line in anothe "Bees wake roused by the cry o because, they insisted, lilac never ci "When you publish a poem in a bo very abstract thing," Hall concludes As if trying to counter the abstra his work, Hall turns to the TV w] Yankees are winning the third gan World Series. He is a long-time base and on one occasion, a player. In the spring of 1973, Hall wrote with New York Times reporter Wooten, ACLU Director Charles1 and a few other non-athletes, abo Geroge Plimpton-inspired (Hall Plimpton, having edited poetry fo pton's Paris Review) adventure at tsburgh Pirates' training camp. "1 is fathers and sons. Football is b beating each other up in the .ba violent and superficial;" Hall wrot By six most mornings, Hall ha coffee over the Concord Monito through the Boston Globe, and is his small study, deep into the firstp the day. "Writing is very hard work, but it," he says without hesitation. "I the best way to get things done is to many different things at once. If Ig on something I put it down an something else. Or I just put it down up and haul wood." While all this activity is*-going stairs, Hall's wife, Jane (who pr maiden name, Kenyon) is upstairs on some poetry of her own, somec will appear in a book next summ also is the co-editor of a poetry m; Green House. The third stage in a poem's deve after he has written it and read it t at a poetry reading, is to show it t mer student, Jane. "We were shy a show each other our work," but changing some, he-says. . Hall may begin the day with a p inN.H. s gulped at Harvard, Hall scoffs, "some of my frien- r, leafed ds thought I was trying to be Hemingway." sitting in F HIS RELATIVES left apple project of -~ pocopeelers and rocking chairs behind t I adore for posterity, Hall's legacy will find that be books: Anthologies and com- fwork o plete works; new releases and wsrk on editions; History, Art, Linguistics, English; get stuck classics, future classics, and fads. Between id go to a growing private library and the stacks of n and get unsolicited books sent by publishers, Donald and Jane could probably satisfy the needs of on down- Wilmot, Andover, and both Danburys with efers her an Eagle Pond Public Library. working But it wasn't to found a library that Hall left of which his South University house. "It's always er. Jane been my wish to write full-time," he recalls. Iagazine, "I knew what I wanted to do, but I didn't know if I could afford it." lopment, -Hall is quick to point out that he didn't o a group dislike the University. "I liked the o his for- classroom in Ann Arbor. And what I really ttht first liked was a sense of doing it (teaching)hwell. -thti "Michigan was very good to me," he ad- ds. The reason Hall turned down offers from oem he's Dartmouth, Harvard and various other schools in the first place was "not so much that Michigan was poetical or stimulating. It just left me free to write poetry." To Hall, writing is a "stuggle" that teaches him more than he could learn in an academic situation. "In the classroom you could get away with murder," he says, Spoem is closing his eyes to slits, thinking back to a y -of its few of his days in front of students. He goes Revision on to explain that it's easy to give certain Reviion kinds of formulaic lectures without much ning, the effort on the professor's part or value for his ail in the stdns "the im- As he looks back at the University, Hall tuse the says "I have a lot of friends who are ght one teachers and writers who want to leave, but who are just too afraid." In this respect, he says, tenure "is one of the worst things in pom when the world. It sets artificial goals and holds etry et teachers back." right." It He .also speaks of changing attitudes r. t among students over his years as a rom the professor. Before the late '60s, D.H. m to the Lawrence was a "box-office">attrac- tion-students were enchanted by his style ders will and message. But over the war years that r instan- changed, "they just giggled at Lawrence," hed in a remembers Hall. red was More generally, "we insist on livin'g ieto without a sense of history" today, Hall says. nvember Since students tend to "lack historical in- dditional telligence," they are missing a great deal of the cart what Hall considers an education. tsmouth Between games and poetry sessions, Hall the New is editing for the Harvard Magazine, writing r poem: a book of literary anecdotes, and putting f lilac," together his own introduction to literature, ries. among other projects. ok, it's a The poet is probably best known around s. the country for his composition book, Writ- ctions of ing Well. The text has been through several here the editions and without it, Hall explains, it e of the would have been impossible to buy a large ball fan, farmhouse in New Hampshire with 300 yards of lake frontage. a book "My poetry (earnings are) just pennies James from heaven," he sighs, searching his sag- Morgan, ging bookshelves for a particular poetry ut their book. knows Sitting back in the living room under John r Plim- Wells, Hall answers a question about his the Pit- lifestyle. "I love it. But don't say 'life style'," Baseball he scowls in mock seriousness, "there's that brothers little magazine Briarwood puts out called ckyard, . 'Lifestyle,' you know." e.at the Donald Hall is right. Eagle Pond Farm could hardly be further from Briarwood ..And back hom Brian Blanchard, a sked to see just or v staff writer, nny, autumn