Pluriverse
Readers of English, thank your gods: the breadth of Ernesto Cardenal鈥檚 amazing poetic career is now available for your consumption thanks to New Directions and the recently published Pluriverse. Spanning fifty-six years, the book presents Cardenal in all his guises: revolutionary, spiritualist, chronicler of man鈥檚 inhumanity to man, chilling visionary, and cosmic quasi-historian. The poems in this collection are often long, deceptively assessable, and quite dazzling.
They told me you were in love with another man
and then I went off to my room
and I wrote that article against the government
that landed me in jail.
When I first encountered the above four lines鈥攖he eighth section of Cardenal鈥檚 long poem 鈥淓pigrams鈥濃擨 was sure I was reading a Latin American writer concerned, a la Neruda, with love and political strife in equal measure. I was right, but little did I know of the complete depth of Cardenal; little did I know that this poem, which is wonderful, was not necessarily a perfect synecdoche of the poet/priest/activist鈥檚 total abilities. 鈥淓pigrams鈥 is early Cardenal, written in a period of reaction against Somoza in Nicaragua. Though its deep political leanings manifest before long, the poet as sad bastard makes an appearance first:
This will be my revenge
that one day you鈥檒l hold in your hands the book of a famous poet
and you鈥檒l read these lines that the author wrote for you
and you won鈥檛 even know it.
Reading the poem alongside the more famous 鈥淶ero Hour,鈥 one can see the development beginning in Cardenal from romantic young poet to mature writer documenting injustice:
. . . the United Fruit Company
with its revolutions for the acquisition of concessions
and exemptions of millions in import duties
and export duties, revisions of old concessions
and grants for new exploitations,
violations of contracts, violations
of the Constitution
鈥淶ero Hour鈥 remains one of the most striking examples of the poet as witness. The artful translation by Donald Walsh (one of seven translators contributing to this collection) captures the horror and history permeating throughout Cardenal鈥檚 long, unsettling poem:
Oh, to be able to sleep in your own bed tonight
without the fear of being pulled out of bed and taken out of your house,
the fear of knocks at the door or doorbells ringing in the night!
Pluriverse jumps from these early works to contemplative, spiritual poems that fuse Cardenal鈥檚 socio-political concerns with his religious vocation鈥斺淚n respect of riches, just or unjust, / of goods be they ill-gotten or well-gotten: / All riches are unjust.鈥 (from 鈥淯nrighteous Mammon (Luke 16:9))鈥攕orrowful meditations, such as his 鈥淧rayer for Marilyn Monroe鈥 and the nightmarish vision of his classic 鈥淎pocalypse,鈥 a poem that seems all the more prophetic when read today:
And the angel gave me a check drawn on the National City Bank
and said unto me: Go thou cash this check
but no bank would for all the banks were bankrupt
Skyscrapers were as though they had never been
A million simultaneous fires yet not one firefighter
nor a phone to summon an ambulance nor were there any ambulances
nor was there enough plasma in all the world
to help the injured of a single city鈥
Cardenal always keeps his eye fixed firmly to his subject, even when bouncing from place to place, as in his 鈥淭rip to New York,鈥 a poem that offers North Americans a look at a foreigner鈥檚 view of our rampant capitalism:
. . . And I look
at the deep canyon, the sunken gorge of buildings
where the hidden persuaders hide behind their windows
selling automobiles of True Happiness, canned Relief (for 30垄)
** The Coca-Cola Company**
we cut through the canyon of windows and trillions of dollars
A seller of old books in the Village in love with my shirt
my cotton peasant shirt from Nicaragua
he asks me who designed it.
Reading Pluriverse from cover to cover is, in effect, charting Cardenal from his beginnings to his current, Cosmic Canticle era writings鈥攑oems that chart the progression of the universe, the Earth, and the individual all at once. The new poems in Pluriverse strive to balance all of creation on the tip of the poet鈥檚 pen, fusing a connection between man and the cosmos:
Our cycle follows the star cycle:
stars are born, grow, die; our cycle is short
鈥 theirs too.
They seem stable
but like us they鈥檙e slowly dying.
If the universe is expanding
from which center is it expanding?
Or is every point the center?
So then the center of the universe
is also our galaxy,
is also our planet
(and the girl who once was for me).
The cosmic/mythical quality of these new works matches the storied life of their author. Cardenal, at age eighty-four, after political opposition, after serving as ambassador for the Sandinistas, after forming the Our Lady of Solentiname commune, after being publicly admonished by Pope John Paul II, after being harassed by the current incarnation of the Sandinistas, has earned the right to look not only backward but beyond, into the furthest regions of space. His findings match the remarkable quality of his past poetry. This is essential reading.

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