
I learned of David’ Bromige's passing on Facebook. And on the cusp of Walt Whitman’s birthday, at that. David was instrumental in my becoming a poet. I remember well that fateful day, in 1979, auditioning for him over the phone (I was a housecleaner-nanny in Belvedere). I wanted to take his poetry class, and upon the urging of friends, I sent in a manuscript, never expecting that I would be accepted into the poetry class, or that it would become my life’s work.
He once quipped that I came charging into the Sonoma State University creative writing program with a full head of steam. No matter that I had absolutely no backgrounds in literature, and had to start at absolute zero with language. I had no inkling what a noun or a verb was, let alone, a modifier. When it came to my unorthodox uses of language, syntax, and punctuation, he was a patient man. What I appreciate most about having been his student is that he allowed me find my own voice and style.
And I ran with it to become editor of Sonoma Mandala Literary Review (now called Zaum), Open Hand and a coordinator for countless poetry events at SSU and in the community: Ear to the Ground, Russian River Writers’ Guild, etc., for 20 plus years.
It was through coordinating poetry readings and events at many Sonoma County venues, from SSU to Inn of the Beginning, West of the Laguna, Cotati Cabaret, Garbo's, Leonard Matlovitch's Stumptown Annie's, Higher Grounds, Copperfield's Books, and the Johnny Otis Niteclub, and it was there that I met the contemporary poets who became my extemporaneous teachers: André Codrescu, Charles Bukowski, Thom Gunn, Charles Bernstein, Anselm Hollo, Allan Ginsberg, Carolyn Forché, Sandra McPherson, Galway Kinnell, Sharon Doubiago, Robert Hass, Eugene Ruggles. Bobby Kaufman, Diane di Prima (I put on a reading for her when "Loba" came out), to name a few.
Wisely, David did not attempt to shape and mold me into a L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poet. Fractured syntax and the exact placing of the eroded coastline of the word on the page was not my cuppa tea, I was a narrative poet with a story to tell. He handed me readings lists: the poetry of Yeats, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Robert, Herrick, Wallace Stevens, William Carlos Williams, T. S. Elliott, H. D., and Chaucer—to name a few. I later came to appreciate much of what David introduced me to, but I was a stubborn, if recalcitrant student, at best. Not much of a follower, more mulish, and certainly not much given to idle hero worship. We had our moments.
I remember one time he called me into his office, I thought, uh-oh, it was going to be bad news, Surely I’d failed a class, but he reached into his filing cabinet and pulled out some beer, cracked it open, and we went over my writing portfolio.
I knew David suffered from childhood diabetes, and having a beer on the sly, was a real no-no. I sat through the tutorial, watching him like a hawk, terrified that he might slip into a diabetic coma. And then what would I do? Campus was closed for the weekend, no 911. Phones couldn't dial out off campus. It was an in-house system. (Pre cell phone days may be hard for the current generations to imagine, but watch '70s-'80s cops & robbers reruns, and you'll see a fair amount of film spent on people hunting down phone booths.)
I loved being an accidental TA as well, when David was in Oakcrest, the local looney bin, and I learned far more from the process of having to teach my peers, cold turkey, all at once, than if I’d been just a sedentary student in our Poetics Senior Seminar. Clifford Schwartz (who was auditing the class), Jim Montrose and I carried on with the class as if the professor had just stepped out for some air. The English Department wisely let us carry on with no one at the helm.
One time we were all in the Sonoma Mandala office, I was typing up poems for the latest issue and I had a momentary starstruck dyslexic faux pas of a moment when I blurted out: "Would you trust a poet in your mouth?" David was quick to quip back, "Hey ya, that's great!" recognizing the metaphor embedded within the Spoonerism. I was so utterly embarrassed, that to this day, I've no idea of what I was really trying to say. But David taught me to value those slip of tongues as random acts of poetry.
Instead of being nitpicky, David had a kindly way of pointing out typos and other glaring printed glitches. In the days before computers and spellcheck, we used an old IBM Selectric. He'd say, "I wonder who...typed 'it's' instead of 'its';" or "'there' when they meant 'they're'?" Or, "Hey, that's interesting. What do you think that comma's doing there? Or "Why do you think someone spelled it 'in memorium' instead of 'in memoriam'."
That was me, on all counts. I feigned innocence on the "it's/its" typo (and never repeated that mistake again, but the"memorium" was a calligraphic scribal error, I was distracted and it was a little harder to pass off as it was my own handwriting, not the IBM Selectric to blame.
Besides, I'd already run off the flyers for Boschka Layton's memorial service, so I spent the afternoon turning that "u" into an "a" on some 500 flyers. Because of David, I learned to pay closer attention to the grammar and structure of language, as well as to punctuation.
Another time, I happened to be in Vancouver, B.C, visiting a poet friend, Fred Herskovitch, who mentioned that a British poet was in town. Imagine my surprise when we trundled off from the depths of the Capilano Gorge to hear David read in a stuffy, hot and overcrowded bookstore loft, in Old Town, Vancouver. (It was a rare, humid sunny solstice evening). Somehow hearing his work out of context of the insular Sonoma County poetry circles put a new emphasis on his words. Or rather, to my listening skills. I was able to hear him in a fresh "voice.
Perhaps that weird Canada connection was the beginning of our friendship, and the beginning of my transition from that of student to peer. Like all good poets, we all went out for beer. Margaret Atwood was there (this was before Handmaiden's Tale and her subsequent rise to fame), David's son, Christopher, and I forget who else was squeezed into our booth. But we talked into the wee hours as poets do.
(I am still processing what David meant to me as our early relationship was sometimes a firestorm of wills. Sometimes he could be so damned English! And me, well, Irish. So as I process and remember, perhaps this blog will expand at a later date. Ironically, David lived in Ireland for a time—sent there to recover from TB—and had fond memories of his extended stay among the Irish. So our angst may have been merely a pedestrian, garden variety of professor/student, rather than that of political boundaries.)
I have not even mentioned David's illustrious career as a poet (see the Wiki entry below), he contained a multitude of writing styles, but by far, one of my favorite, delightfully earthy and humorous poems of his is from:
Tiny Courts in a World without Scales
Mañana from Heaven
I just want a couple acres
in beautiful country
where I can put two-three Chevys
up on cinder blocks
and abandon a stack
of automobile tires
Last time I saw David was in Sebastopol, ca. 2001, right before he had his stroke. We bumped into each other coming from the market, and so we popped around the corner into a wine bar and we sipped a lovely tall glasses of cabernet mid-afternoon. Sinfully delicious. The circle completed—from student/professor to comfortable old friends. Like the comforting whisper of worn corduroy. That day, tranquil, indelible as stone, will remain with me forever.
May the road rise lightly at your back, David.
May it rise like your words on the wind.
Here's to you, lad, I raise my class on high.
P.S. Hey David, look, I got "memoriam" right this time.
Beloved former Sonoma County's first Poet Laureate, lionized by Bart Schneider in the Bohemian.
Wiki bio.
If you knew David, please post a memorial note at the Wordpress site. http://bit.ly/KET2A
From my BAPC entry;
I began writing in earnest somewhere between 1978 and 1979. I didn't know what to do with it, as it was somewhere between ballad and poetry. I was given a lead on a poetry professor at Sonoma State where I was finishing up my BA in Art Studio and hanging out taking extra classes so I wouldn't have to begin repaying my student loan.
Someone urged me to submit poems in order to get into David Bromige's poetry class. I remember the phone call. I was at work, I was a housekeeper nanny working in Belvedere. I was in shock as he had accepted my work. I told David Bromige I didn't know if it was poetry or not but I couldn't help myself, it was pouring out of me.


2 comments:
Regarding: "Clifford Schwartz, Jim Montrose and I carried on with the class as if the professor had just stepped out for some air."
Well, that must have been when I was visiting (auditing) David's classes in 1981. I was studying Calligraphy in San Francisco by that time, with a good paying nightshift job and a new car. That was when I met you, Maureen, in David's poetry class; but I was only visiting, and was not enrolled.
Ten years prior to that I'd attended Sonoma state where I'd befriended David (and had begun the transition from student to peer, as you wrote). I was "re-connecting" with David in 1981 when I met you in his class; his divorce from Sherril Jaffe had shook ME up quite a bit, so I'd not seen David for a while.
I'm very glad that I knew David, and that he introduced me to you.
I remember stepping into the elevator after class with you and David, and David introducing us. So, you must've come to class several times for me to get the impression you were enrolled.
I remember we hit it off swimmingly over calligraphy—I was taking a class too with Adele Friedman (Georgianna Greenwood school).
After you stepped out, David turned, blocked the door, and cautioned me not to "hurt" you. "He's a friend." It was so left field. Was he expecting elevator kung fu—or was he merely projecting his own vagaries of the heart?? The divorce must've left him unhinged....
I remember being stunned, my cheeks flaming, thinking. "this is awkward," as it was the last thing on my mind. Which led me to wonder how on earth did he see me? I was certainly no vamp. More vestigial than anything else. But that was David: off the wall, no self-censor button. So if I kept my distance, that was why... Soon after, he checked into Oakcrest.
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