By Christopher Orlet on 6.12.08 @ 12:07AM
Cruel and unusual punishment in enlightened Vermont.
Throughout the history of Western Civilization governments have
devised all manner of diabolical ways to punish malefactors and
scofflaws. Until the 20th century those found guilty of serious
crimes at the Old Bailey were subject to any number of gruesome
punishments, including drawing and quartering and burning at the
stake, or they might be broken on the wheel, or simply hanged and
dissected. But this time Vermont officials have really gone too
far.
The story begins last December when some 50 Vermont teens
decided to throw a kegger at the one-time farmhouse of the late
poet Robert Frost. One is tempted to give the teens the benefit of
the doubt, to presume that they were just a group of neo-Beatniks,
wine-drinking devotees of verse, and that they had broken into the
farmhouse to celebrate the great bard's iconic verse when,
tragically, an impromptu poetry slam got out of hand. But the fact
of the matter is the perpetrators were just a bunch of stoners
looking for a deserted building to trash.
By the time the last partier passed out, the farm was a
shambles. Damaged was estimated at more than $10,000. Some 50
delinquents were rounded up by the local gendarmes and
turned over to Addison County State's Attorney John Quinn. I am not
sure if the prosecutor is a Robert Frost fanatic or what exactly
drove him to exact such cruel revenge, but whatever the reason, the
young vandals received a punishment that would have made Torquemada
proud. They were sentenced to attend two sessions of poetry
study.
IN AN INTERVIEW with the Boston Globe, State's Attorney
Quinn explained his unorthodox, if not downright bizarre, decision.
"I guess I was thinking that if these teens had a better
understanding of who Robert Frost was, and his contribution to our
society, that they would be more respectful of other people's
property in the future and would also learn something from the
experience."
Sadly Quinn did not elaborate on how sitting through two
sessions of poetry study instills in delinquents a respect for
other's private property, especially if that private property is
essential for a night of righteous babes, booze and weed.
Of course if you really wanted to punish delinquent teens the
author to read is not Frost, but that other great inaugural poet,
Maya Angelou. Or just about any contemporary poet, for that matter.
Such a penalty would go a long way toward setting wayward feet back
on the straight and narrow and making sure they stay there.
Permanently.
PERHAPS SUCH CREATIVE alternative sentencing will set a precedent.
What's more, the sentencing possibilities are endless, and, I
confess, rather entertaining to think about. Convicted murders
could be sentenced to a summer term in the true crime section of
their local library. On the "required" reading list: Truman
Capote's In Cold Blood, in which the wretches hang, and
Norman Mailer's Executioner's Song, in which the killer is
put up against the wall and shot. Convicted arsonists will have to
read Russell Edson's "Fire Is Not a Nice Guest." Motorists who are
pulled over and don't have proof of insurance will be forced to
stand on the side of the road and read poet John Ashbery's "The
Wrong Kind of Insurance," while hopping around on one foot (purely
for the police officer's enjoyment). Teens caught drinking and
driving will have to sit through a class in Japanese Death
poems.
The death poems are actually interesting reading and would
probably get the attention of teens -- at least the angst-ridden,
goth ones. Best of all, they are short. And whereas Westerners are
prone to write ghastly suicide notes, the Japanese compose brief
poems like this one written by a guy named Shoro back in
1894:
Pampas grass, now dry,
once bent this way
and that.
Or this one by Kozan Ichikyo from 1360:
Empty-handed I entered the world
Barefoot I leave it.
My coming, my going --
Two simple happenings
That got entangled.
Frost biographer Jay Parini, who volunteered to teach the
alternative sentencing classes, and whose Frost courses at
Middlebury College reportedly cost students "a hefty sum," likewise
believes in "the redemptive power of poetry." Such talk is fine in
an English term paper, even a master's thesis defending the
redemptive power of poetry, but isn't it a bit out of place in the
legal system? I've yet to see any evidence of poetry's magic power
to change delinquent behavior. Besides, that's not why we read, or
should read, poetry. Poetry is, in Ezra Pound's words, an art
"originally intended to make glad the heart of man." True, not all
of it succeeds at this. In fact reading some contemporary verse can
seem like cruel and inhuman punishment. Even some Frost.
Robert Frost was a bit of an ornery old cuss. He believed fences
made good neighbors, and as for poetry, it was "a way of taking
life by the throat." I suspect the one-time swinger of birches,
were he alive, would have taken those teens out behind the woodshed
and applied a birch switch to their behinds. It's a good thing he
isn't.
topics:
Law