MEDITATION AT OYSTER RIVER
MEDITATION AT OYSTER RIVER was written in the summer of
2003. Though I have not written a great deal of vocal music, I have
been drawn to Theodore Roethke's last book of poetry, The Far Field, for
at least twenty five years. In the early 1980's, I based a violin
sonata on selected passages from the title poem. I am drawn to the
collection's natural imagery and insight. And, though the prevailing
subject matter centers around the poet's impending death, I have always
been taken by the poetry's optimism and celebration of life.
As an artist, I sympathize with the poet in his
identification of his life energy with his art. Though the end of
his life brings despair, it also brings inspiration. That
inspiration allows him to treasure his existence and come to terms with
its limits.
The poem, Meditation At Oyster River, seems to me
to be a metaphor for how that life-nourishing inspiration emerged from
under the shadow of death. At first, it is just a single ripple,
barely noticeable through the stillness. But a lifetime of
experience identifies its meaning. A lifetime of seasons identifies
the illusive scent of spring. The poet sits on the riverbank and
waits with patient excitement for what he knows is coming. His tired
body disguising his tingling flesh. As the inspiration rushes over,
he is revitalized and feels young again, turning his despair into wonder
and irony.
