Where Is My Lariat?: The Poetry of John McKernan
by Askold Melnyczuk
In 1962 John McKernan was expelled
from the pre-med program at Creighton University for, in his own
words, “drinking and carousing.” Thank God. Until his
expulsion, he had not read or studied a single poem. From Creighton,
McKernan went on to the University of Omaha where he majored variously
in History, Philosophy and English. He received a Graduate Fellowship
to the University of Arkansas and did further work in creative writing
at Columbia University. As if making up for time lost, he has been
remarkably energetic in his pursuit of the craft. In addition to
teaching, editing The Little Review and translating from
the works of Rimbaud, Horace, Guillevic and Rilke, he has published
several hundred poems in many of the best literary magazines in
the country.
Perhaps the first thing one notices about McKernan’s poetry
is his passion for places: New York, Illinois, Alabama, West Virginia,
Alaska and Japan are just a few of the names appearing in the following
pages. That is quite an area to cover. But the poet is not straining
to somehow encompass the world, nor is he making any grandiose claims
to universality. He is of a specific time, of a particular place,
and he knows it. Often this awareness is painful and frustrating,
as evident in the poem ingenuously titled “Shucks.”
Here, the poet’s personal attempt to bridge the gap between
Eastern and Western Cultures ends in failure: “But always
mid-west/Tornadoes slam through/My veins . . . .” Although
we can try physically to escape, or bury, our past, we cannot be
other than what we are.
On the other hand, we are often not what we appear. McKernan has
a pronounced affection for the whimsical—some of his titles
are almost poems themselves. Many of his personae assume a voice
of disarming simplicity. How does one respond to a poem that concludes:
“I am/From Denver. Up in the sky. Simple. I/Would just die
to talk to Susan one day.”? Well, having read the poems that
precede it, the reader does not fully believe him. However, while
this “simple I” is only one of the poet’s poses,
it would be wrong to divide the poems into the serious and the not-so-serious.
McKernan is not as accommodating as that. The light and the serious
(in fashionable terms, one would call it the poet’s darker
side) generally blend together, like two parts of an integrated
personality. Thus the final poem included here has the most farcical
title and the most morbid last lines; conversely, “Where is
My Lariat?” begins despairingly and moves to an unexpectedly
playful conclusion.
It would be too easy to say that McKernan’s poems are refreshing,
witty, complex and original. These are characteristics one takes
for granted in all poets of his caliber. But a love poem (which
is of course more than a love poem) as fine as “The Only Known
Road Map of the Alaskan Islands” is almost too much to expect
from anyone.
Askold Melnyczuk is founding editor of AGNI.

