June 9, 2004
By CHARLES McGRATH :: NYTimes.com
 
Christopher Ricks, the newly elected professor of poetry at
Oxford, is also the Warren Professor of Humanities at
Boston University, where he has a large and elegantly
furnished office overlooking Storrow Drive, and he bikes to
it every day from his house in Cambridge. The bookshelves
contain a complete vellum-bound set of Johnson's "Lives of
the Poets" and copies of the many books Mr. Ricks has
himself written or edited - books about Keats, Milton,
Beckett and T. S. Eliot; editions of Tennyson, Housman and
Eliot's early poems; anthologies of Victorian verse and of
English poetry from the anonymous author of "Sumer is
icumen in" to Seamus Heaney. In a corner by the desk there
is also a boom box. Mr. Ricks brings this to lectures when
he wants to talk about another of his favorite poets: Bob
Dylan.
 
Mr. Ricks, who is 70 and was born in Britain and educated
at Oxford, is a professor's professor, a don's don. He is
courtly, charming and fond of wicked anecdotes about
academic backbiting. He is also immensely learned. It's a
tossup whether he or Harold Bloom knows more English verse
by heart, but Mr. Ricks surely knows more Led Zeppelin
lyrics than Mr. Bloom does, and can recite them on request.
His love of Mr. Dylan's work is not an affectation, though
- the pathetic impersonation of an old prof trying to prove
how cool he is - but a genuine passion. He has just added
to the not inconsiderable body of Dylan scholarship with a
book of his own, his longest to date, "Dylan's Visions of
Sin" (Ecco Press), which devotes some 500 pages to a close
analysis, line by line sometimes, of the master's greatest
hits.
 
The book begins with an address to the reader that is a
little riff on one of Mr. Dylan's best-known early songs:
"All I really want to do is - what, exactly? Be friends
with you? Assuredly, I don't want to do you in, or select
you or dissect you or inspect you or reject you." And it
continues in much the same vein. Mr. Ricks's writing style
is not unlike his conversational style: witty, allusive,
punning (in the book, for example, he talks about a "crhche
course" and "bed-rheumy eyes"), digressive and
free-ranging, darting off to make connections that are
sometimes baffling but more often surprising and
provocative. At various points he compares Mr. Dylan to
Marvell, Marlowe, Keats, Tennyson, Hardy, Yeats and Marlon
Brando, to cite just a few of his references.
 
One of Mr. Ricks's critics, the Oxford don John Carey, has
complained that there is something slightly
"trainspotter-ish" - or obsessively detailed - about
"Dylan's Visions of Sin," and he points out that Mr. Ricks
is so ingenious he "could prove the telephone book was
beautifully intricate if he tried." The book pays no
attention at all to Mr. Dylan's life - no mention here of
his famous shift from acoustic to electric guitar, of his
conversions from Judaism to Christianity and back again, or
of his recent appearance in a Victoria's Secret commercial
- and is more interested in the form of the songs than
their content.
 
Certain passages of "Dylan's Visions of Sin" may strike
some readers as over the top, as when Mr. Ricks devotes
four pages (and four footnotes) to the lyrics of "All the
Tired Horses," a song that is only two lines long - or
maybe three, if you count the long "Hmmmm" at the end.
 
Other chapters, though, draw insightful and persuasive
parallels between, say, "Lay Lady Lay" and John Donne's
poem "To His Mistress Going to Bed," between "Not Dark Yet"
and Keats's "Ode to a Nightingale," and between "A Hard
Rain's A-Gonna Fall" and the Scottish ballad "Lord Randal."
And throughout the book Mr. Ricks is particularly
perceptive about the way Mr. Dylan, whom he calls "one of
the great rhymesters of all time," punctuates his songs
with brilliant and surprising line endings. (Mr. Ricks's
favorite is the rhyme in "Sign on the Window" that pairs
the line "Build me a cabin in Utah" with "Have a bunch of
kids who call me `Pa.' ")
 
"A day doesn't go by when I don't listen to Dylan or at
least think about him and his art," Mr. Ricks said in a
recent interview - on the afternoon, as it happened, of Mr.
Dylan's 63rd birthday. "I just think we're terrifically
lucky to be alive at a time when he is."
 
Mr. Ricks first became aware of Mr. Dylan's music while he
was teaching at the University of California, Berkeley, in
1965, but in those days he was only "hearing" the songs, he
said, not "listening" to them. "For some reason," he added,
"I was proud or indifferent." He began listening one
evening at Smith College in 1968 when after dinner his host
turned out the lights and put on "Desolation Row" a song
bound to catch an English teacher's attention since it has
the lines (or used to, until Mr. Dylan stopped including
them) about "Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot/Fighting in the
captain's tower/While calypso singers laugh at them."
"Well, the depth of that," Mr. Ricks said. "I thought those
were wonderful. I thought those were great lines."
 
Around the same time Mr. Ricks also began listening to Mr.
Dylan's love songs. "You love a song at first by applying a
person you knew to that song," he said. "And then it very
beautifully turns into the other, complimentary thing,
which is that you understand the person better by virtue of
the song, and it's a lovely sort of virtuous circle that
this is. The extraordinary applicability of the songs does
seem to me to be part of their greatness. I do in the book
somehow say, `How did Dylan know this about me?' "
 
Mr. Ricks said he actually signed a contract to write a
book about Mr. Dylan 20 years ago, but only recently got
around to writing it - in part, he said, because it was
some of Mr. Dylan's later Christian songs that suggested
the shape of the book, which uses the seven deadly sins,
the virtues and the heavenly graces as a loose organizing
principle or, as Mr. Ricks puts it, "the right handle to
take hold of the bundle." After finishing the book, he
said, he was "quite looking forward to resting on my
laurels," but the Oxford poetry post obliges him to give
two lectures a year there, and he had already begun to
consider some possible subjects. "I do think I should bring
Dylan in," he said. "It would be false not to."
 
Not everyone of his acquaintance shares Mr. Ricks's Dylan
enthusiasm. "My eldest child is 45," he said, "and I think
he faintly pities me about this." An expedition with some
of his younger children to see the Dylan movie "Masked and
Anonymous" was, he admits, "not successful." John Silber,
the former chancellor of Boston University and a friend of
Mr. Ricks, used to pretend that the Dylan who so captivated
Mr. Ricks, was Dylan Thomas, not the former Bob Zimmerman.
And even Mr. Ricks's wife, the photographer Judith Aronson,
didn't go to all three concerts when Mr. Dylan was
performing in the Boston area recently. But it never
occurred to Mr. Ricks to skip one. Dylan concerts have a
particular beauty and also a certain sadness, he explained,
because Mr. Dylan himself is the one person who has to be
at a Dylan concert and also the one person who can't go to
a Dylan concert. "It's sad," he said, "the way it's sad
that Jane Austen couldn't read a Jane Austen novel."
 
When he was asked if he had ever met Mr. Dylan in person,
Mr. Ricks smiled and made a zipper-closing gesture across
his mouth. His fondness and protectiveness, it turns out,
extend even to the singer's appearance. After the release
of "Time Out of Mind" in 1997, Mr. Ricks was upset by the
thin little mustache that Mr. Dylan had begun sporting." "I
just don't think it looks good," he said. "Do you?" He
added that he thought about getting up a petition reading:
"Mr. Dylan, please remove the stipple from your upper lip."
"I didn't send it," he said, "because my students said that
it might hurt Dylan's feelings. But `lip' and `stipple' - I
quite liked that."
 
 
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