Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Mount Auburn: Chapters of Poetry & Prose | Page 7

“... upon the borders of two worlds...” Stairway to Heaven Mount Auburn was founded as New Englanders were replacing long-held views about the horrors of death with more gentle ideas about mortality. The drastic shift to an acceptance of death as part of the natural cycle of life was best illustrated in Mount Auburn’s early history by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow who wrote the following to a friend after burying his first wife at the Cemetery in 1837: “Yesterday I was at Mount Auburn, and saw my own grave dug; that is, my own tomb. I assure you, I looked quietly down into it, without one feeling of dread.” Poet Robert Creeley has more recently in time echoed Longfellow’s same sentiments, celebrating his family’s lot at Mount Auburn with the poem “Stairway to Heaven.” In 2005 Creeley was buried on that small rise along Tulip Path he so lovingly described. His wife, Penelope, shared her husband’s strong connections to the family lot, making Creeley’s poem about Mount Auburn all the more resonant. “To say that Robert loved Mount Auburn is to risk making his deep, complex feeling for the place sound trite. His sense of connection to Mount Auburn was as intricate as his connection to his family, and to New England. He was born in Arlington, brought home as a baby to Mt. Auburn St. in Watertown, spent his boyhood in West Acton, went to boarding school in New Hampshire, to college in Cambridge. His first child was born in Truro, on Cape Cod. Life took him far afield, but he was always glad to take any chance to come back. On several occasions when we were in the Boston area, Robert brought Will, Hannah and me to Mount Auburn. He wanted us to see this beautiful place, to know it through his eyes. He would tell us the family stories he remembered: stories of his father’s father, who had a farm on what is now Belmont Hill, stories of why his par- ents are buried in another nearby Mount Auburn plot, not in the main family plot. Robert felt a kinship here, with the people, with the trees, with the roll of the land, the changes of light and weather. They were as intrinsically famil- iar, as deeply known as only recollection of childhood can make a place. In life he loved ‘the company,’ as he called his friends, fellow poets and beloveds, and liked the idea of sharing some of the same company in death, too.” by Robert Creeley (early 1980’s) Late one beautiful fall afternoon, soon after we had moved to Providence, Robert and I made a visit to Mount Auburn. We did not know then that the end of his life was approaching so fast. We found Tulip Path quite easily this time. We strolled along in the unexpected late October warmth, in shafting golden sunlight and blazing leaves, the air blue-purple. Robert stood looking out over his family plot, out to what I have always imagined was Watertown, where he was born. He was quiet, thoughtful. I asked him if he felt sad, or spooked. ‘Oh no’, he said, ‘not at all. I feel comforted. It’s very reassuring. I’m home’.” Robert Creeley standing at his family’s lot. Photo courtesy of Pen Creeley There is more online! After visiting Robert Creeley’s grave on Tulip Path, poet Law- rence Ferlinghetti penned two poems about his experience at Mount Auburn. Visit us online to read these works, which are shared with Ferlinghetti’s permission. www.moun- tauburn.org/sweet-auburn-winter-2013/ Point of hill We’d come to, small rise there, the friends now separate, cars back of us by lane, the stones, Bowditch, etc., location, Tulip Path, hard to find on the shaft, that insistent rise to heaven goes down and down, with names like floors, ledges of these echoes, Charlotte, Sarah, Thomas, Annie and all, as with wave of hand I’d wanted them one way or other to come, go with them. Winter 2013 | 5