When a Lonely Heart is Just a Queer One

When a Lonely Heart is Just a Queer One PDF

Written by : Nour Kamel

Nour Kamel is a writer and editor of things, and was shortlisted for the Brunel University International African Poetry Prize (2020). Their chapbook Noon is part of the New-Generation African Poets (Sita) series and their writing appears or is forthcoming in Asameena, Anomaly, Sukoon, Rusted Radishes, Khabar Keslan, and Voicemail Poems.

 

Dear Sue—

 Unable are the

Loved—to die—

For Love is immortality—

Nay—it is Deity— 

Emily. 1

 ***

 My kinship to Emily Dickinson extended only to her poetry and her as a poet. I never felt kinship with Emily Dickinson herself; I was told to feel pity. Told: here is a woman no one understood, a woman who didn’t want people to understand her, who shut herself off from the world, never loved or was loved and only ever pined for death. A gothic and romanticized fantasy in place of any person Emily could ever be allowed to be. When I thought of Emily, I thought of a lonely recluse, a forlorn, self-imposed shut-in who passioned deeply, yet waited for death rather than live. The world was too much. The world refused to contain all the parts of her it didn’t approve of. She shut herself in to keep herself. When she died, they took her anyway.

***

This is my letter to the World

That never wrote to Me

***2

 I live in Egypt, a vast geographical distance from where Emily lived and died. In a British highschool and British university, I was taught by others about her surrounding history, poetry, culture, and words. Later, I would learn about her on my own from a virtual web of information that is limited, still, despite its ability to connect and share knowledge because I hadn’t been given whole parts of her story. I will probably never see or place in my hands anything of hers that was physical: her poems, her remaining letters and papers. Anything actually Emily. I will only ever have things that have been shaped and rewritten by others, regurgitated back to me through them first.

 ***

To own a Susan of my own

Is of itself a Bliss—

Whatever Realm I forfeit, Lord,

Continue me in this! 3

 ***

 Through Wild Nights with Emily – a play-turned-movie by Madeleine Olnek – and the slew of articles it spawned, I discovered everything I was told about Emily was wrong. Emily had a long-standing and well-documented (yet subsequently erased) love affair with her childhood friend and future sister-in-law Susan Gilbert. Olnek, herself a lesbian woman, tears through the heteronormative framework that had trapped Emily for so long and redacted Susan entirely. The movie shows an Emily entirely human and relatable and queer. She was never anyone’s tragic romantic fantasy except those who decided to make her so to make her more palatable. Her relationship with Susan was never hidden, just ignored.

 *** 

Her breast is fit for pearls,

But I was not a “Diver”—

Her brow is fit for thrones

But I have not a crest,

Her heart is fit for home—

I – a Sparrow – build there

Sweet of twigs and twine

My perennial nest.4

 ***

 All her longing and energy and love, despite what I’d been taught, was not wholly directed in a heterosexual way. Her play with gender, her play with structure, her influence on modernists and what would become stream-of-consciousness style, were all things I felt kinship with in her writing, yet I felt distanced from her real-life life. I feel betrayed and misled by academics and the literary world (ruled by white people) who chose to paint her as a loveless recluse who never married and therefore never loved, never lived her full potential as ‘woman’ in a heteronormative world. But like Sappho, Emily’s poems were never geared towards just one sex, she always wrote to whoever she loved and longed for. a lot of the time, it was to Susan she wrote.

 ***

To miss you, Sue,

is power.5

 ***

Emily’s poetry was heavily edited after her death, and her love letters to women changed to address men instead or erased entirely. The majority of her poems were published after her death because no one would publish her when she was living, her writing not quite fitting the style of the times nor bending to the fancies of the men who decided what was and wasn’t worth publishing. Far too often across history has this happened to great women artists. How many have been made to live the lives others expect of them, their art and true lives never acknowledged fully? Their words taken, or erased, or changed to fit societal molds and expectations, only to then be profited off of by others?

 

Mabel Loomis Todd – her first editor to collate and publish Emily’s poems

Erased as much of Susan as she possibly could

A Susan who was wife to Austin Dickinson

Austin who was lover to Mabel, and Mabel who so loved

The recluse of Emily who refused to ever see Mabel—

 The Emily who loved Susan.

 Wild nights

And buried history

Of women – loving women

And not tearing each other – 

Up – everything tidy – 

Covered up.

 Someone who has a lover – 

A woman lover and loves her – 

Can never be hidden forever 

Or made to be ‘in love’ with any man

She just happened to write letters to.

***

I dwell in Possibility –

A fairer House than Prose –

More numerous of Windows –

Superior – for Doors –6

***

 Emily was queer, in every historical sense of the word. The mythology around her was that she was misunderstood – and that was entirely by design, but it wasn’t Emily’s. She wanted to be known and understood, she wanted her words published and read. As Emily’s posthumous and self-appointed first editor and publisher Mabel Loomis Todd made Emily publishable by removing every trace of her queerness, thereby making her an unknown, a mystery in the process.

 The dead have nothing to fear. Neither did the living Emily. She sent out her words and yearned like every writer to be published. No one wanted her ‘queer’ words, her new style that didn’t rhyme, and her gendered name.

 Where is respect for the dead?

Why now – over a hundred and thirty 

Some years since she existed – 

And wrote words – Why 

Does it come to light – to consciousness

To queer poetics 

Being allowed – to be queer poetics?

Til the almost 21st century

Before a woman saw another woman, fully

And told us she loved – a woman?

 I guess – we all know why.

 To the women who erased, the women who ignored

And to the women who love women

And let Emily love them – too – 

In front of the whole world.

 None – will ever know her. 

 Who better to make a myth – indeed 

Then a silenced and unvoiced woman poet? 

To create from her words the narrative of a woman 

Love scorned – lusting for love, never fulfilling it? 

Whose words – cut up – put back together – 

Were made to support this?

***

Success is counted sweetest

By those who ne’er succeed.

To comprehend a nectar

Requires sorest 7

***

Historians knew. It is something 

– Apparently – hard to miss

Unless you’re really not looking for it – 

Unless you cannot imagine anything outside

What you want of Emily – her life to be

Like her family – like her obsessive documentarians 

And those who would fall in straight love – 

With a dead girl who wrote words of longing for love –  

But always had it. Just not the way 

her or Sue –

could have ever been – together.

***

Tell all the truth but tell it slant —

Success in Circuit lies

Too bright for our infirm Delight

The Truth’s superb surprise

As Lightning to the Children eased

With explanation kind

The Truth must dazzle gradually

Or every man be blind —8

***

Death, the myth – and immortality. 

How would she want to be remembered? 

No one anticipates erasure, but it is a fact

A given of death. Posthumous infamy 

Is phenomenon unaccounted for, nor

Does its shape ever look the same.  

***

 Because I could not stop for Death –

He kindly stopped for me –

The Carriage held but just Ourselves –

And9 Immortality. 

***

 A lack-of-love, though love in many forms was there, became her pseudonym, her calling card. The queen of lonely hearts turned black from lack of love. She would become the goddess of unrequited love, of being ignored and lost and unloved because of some disadvantage in the shape of our society. Emily was never disadvantaged. Emily needed, alone, to unshape society for herself. Society and those around her saw this as an affront, specifically a female one. Who can unmake society alone?

 ***

Show me Eternity, and I will show you Memory—

Both in one package lain

And lifted back again—

Be Sue—while I am Emily—

Be next—what you have ever been—Infinity.10

***

I have reclaimed Emily as my own. If parts of her life that resonated with mine hadn’t been hidden for so long, would I have read her more deeply? Afforded her more of my time? I will now – I give her words more weight and seek them out, thirsty for what I may have read as queer in them but was told could not have possibly ever been there.

I was told that she could never be quite understood and that some of us should never try. But we persist, we shift, we take a hundred different looks and stick with our conviction – that we have always existed. Some of us will never stop looking for ourselves in history, because more often than not there we are – staring back out at ourselves, our kin, our kindred. Ancestors and descendants who survived, in spite of it all, and lived their lives as full as we try and find ways to live our lives now.

***

I have intended to

write you Emily to-day but the

quiet has not been mine  I send

you this, lest I should seem to

have turned away from a kiss –

If you have suffered this past

summer           I am sorry I

Emily bear a sorrow that I

never uncover — — If a nightingale

sings with her breast against

a thorn, why not we

when I can I shall write –

 Sue –11

Nourishing the roots 

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Footnotes

  1. https://americanqueer.org/poetry/
  2. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/47652/because-i-could-not-stop-for-death-479
  3. Maria Popova. “Figuring.” published February 2019 
  4. https://americanqueer.org/poetry/
  5. https://americanqueer.org/poetry/
  6. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/52197/i-dwell-in-possibility-466
  7. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/45721/success-is-counted-sweetest-112
  8. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/56824/tell-all-the-truth-but-tell-it-slant-1263
  9. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/47652/because-i-could-not-stop-for-death-479
  10. Maria Popova. “Figuring.” published February 2019
  11. https://americanqueer.org/poetry/

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