Philip Levine in NAR: “The Rats”

The Rats

“When you know the shadows are the rats you’re through.”

                                                                                        Edgar Allan Poe

Because of the great press

of steel on steel

I cannot hear the shadows hunched

under the machines. When the power

fails, the machine stops,

and the lights go out

I am listening to myself

to my breathing and to

the noise my breathing makes.

 

They are moving, the shadows,

out of time, out

of sight, somewhere out

there in the darkness, and

when the lights

come back they are no longer

where they were.

 

Someone who never stood

next to me has poisoned

the shadows. They are dead

in the stairwell or under

the floorboards, darker

than ever and more compact

and moving in the sweet air

sweetening the air I breathe.

 

Later I will be in

the parking lot looking

for my car or I will remember

I have no car and it

will be tomorrow or years

from then.

 

It will be now.

I will have been talking

sitting across from where

you sit at ease on

the outrageous, impeccable sofa

I have admired,

and in that quiet that comes

in speech I will hear them

moving at last and see them

moving toward you in the light

bringing their great sweetness.

 

NAR 249.4


Courtesy  of Wesleyan University Press

Three issues passed between Philip Levine’s first North American Review appearance and the publication of “The Rats” in the winter of 1964. The issue found Levine in good company, alongside paired poems by David Ignatow, William Stafford, and Catherine Davis, and another by James Dickey. In a practice we’ve eschewed in recent years, NAR editor Richard Dana also published three of his own poems in the issue.

Levine’s poem appeared on page 39, wedged into the layout alongside an essay entitled “Jazz, Freedom and the Amateur,” a pairing that might have pleased the jazz-loving poet. The issue also featured a photo essay on the folk singer Odetta, who had performed the year before alongside Martin Luther King Jr. at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.

“The Rats” is a poem that begins, characteristically, on the job, or in some industrial space where “Because of the great press / of steel on steel / I cannot hear the shadows hunched / under the machines.” Not simply or strictly a poem of work, the piece is an urban nocturne which Levine introduces with a quotation liberally paraphrased from the writer he calls “Edgar” Poe: “When you know that shadows are the rats you’re through.”

The contributors’ notes for the issue observe that Levine’s first book, On the Edge, had recently been issued in paperback. It would be another three years or so before a somewhat revised version of “The Rats” would be appear in his third volume, Not This Pig, on Wesleyan University Press.

Photo by by Geoffrey Berliner


 

Philip Levine Headshot

Philip Levine was an American poet best known for his poems about working-class Detroit. He taught for more than thirty years in the English department of California State University, Fresno and held teaching positions at other universities as well.