Birds of poetry
Progressive, The, Feb, 2005 by Matthew Rothschild
American Smooth By Rita Dove W. W. Norton. 143 pages. $22.95.
Citizen By Andrew Feld Perennial. 75 pages. $12.95.
The Shadow's Horse By Diane Glancy University of Arizona Press. 58 pages. $15.95.
The School Among the Ruins By Adrienne Rich W. W. Norton. 113 pages. $22.95.
Buffalo Head Solos By Tim Seibles Cleveland State University. 132 pages. $16.
Madness and Retribution By Juliette Torrez Manic Press. 77 pages. $12. 95.
Over the holidays, I took a week's vacation in poetry, enjoying the condensed form, the spun phrase, the out-of-nowhere image.
I'm attracted to it all, but especially to engaged poetry, work that tangles with America or soars above us and spots the glaring error as well as the beauty.
Fortunately, we have two magnificent frigate birds among us, Adrienne Rich and Rita Dove, who are masters at this.
In Rich's latest work, The School Among the Ruins, Bush's Iraq War repeatedly intrudes. Here, for instance, is from "Wait":
sand screams against your government issued tent hell's noise in your nostrils crawl into your ear-shell wrap yourself in no-thought wait no place for the little lyric.
This book is an ode to solidarity and defiance, and the power of the word: "word and body/are all we have to lay on the line."
All this we've come to expect from Rich, who over a lifetime has devoted herself to laying it on the line. But also to love, lesbian love, which she evokes in subtle, beautiful ways.
Sleeping with you after weeks apart how normal yet after midnight to turn and slide my arm along your thigh drawn up in sleep what delicate amaze.
The verses Rich dedicates to June Jordan, the poet, essayist, activist, and teacher, who used to write for The Progressive, especially moved me. "The world's quiver and shine/I'd clasp for you forever," Rich writes.
Rich gives her gift of words to us, not knowing ultimately what will become of them or us ("words of the poets tumble/into the shuddering stream"), but hopeful that someone will be on the receiving end to revive this "moribund democracy."
Rita Dove, Pulitzer Prize-winner, offers in American Smooth an astonishing collection that covers race, music, dance, the quality of contentedness in a good marriage, practice at a shooting range, and, like Rich, the power of the word: "We put our thoughts out there on the cosmos express/and they hurtle on, tired and frightened."
The poems on race have a particular urgency. In "Brown," she writes:
For once I was not the only black person in the room (two others, both male). I thought of Sambo; I thought a few other things, too, unmentionable here. Don't get me wrong." I've always loved my skin, the way it glows against citron and fuchsia, the difficult hues but the difference I cause whenever I walk into a polite space is why I prefer grand entrances....
This poem foreshadows a later one, "Hattie McDaniel Arrives at the Coconut Grove," in which the first African American Oscar winner makes a grand entrance of her own.
In a series of poems entitled "Not Welcome Here," Dove writes about black soldiers in World War I and World War II and the treatment they received from their "impertinent nation" upon returning home:
You didn't want us when we left but we went. You didn't want us coming back but here we are.
Dove can swoop down on one page to capture the common spoken English ("Gee, that sucks") and on the next ascend with an image of a "manicured spider."
No matter the pitch, she pulls it off.
During migration, when there's a storm over the Gulf of Mexico, songbirds gather in astonishing bunches after making landfall. You can find six scarlet tanagers in a single bush, a dozen indigo buntings, and warblers of every stripe.
Here's a few more from 2004 that I identified on holiday.
Citizen, by Andrew Feld
"The one who writes my history will be the one who wears a wire," writes Andrew Feld, in a great opening line to "Zealot." Or, in another: "... God is the name/we give to all the things that scare us most:/how we live, and what happens when we don't."
Feld brings a philosophical mind to the page, and he grounds it in world events, like the Atom bomb, which appears on the very first page and returns in a poem about an uncle who worked on the Manhattan Project.
In "Best and Only," he surveys the twentieth century, with a particular focus on Richard Nixon and Bebe Rebozo, including a scene with both men urinating off the stern of the Sequoia: "... the president pissing/on the Republic, over which he stands. Exposed ..."
Feld mixes these musings with self-deprecating soul searchings and a reverence for language, as in the closing line of the redemptive last poem: "back to life clothed in new sounds new words."
The Shadow's Horse, by Diane Glancy
The narrator's father worked in the stockyards of Chicago, and many of the most powerful poems in this book relate to that experience. This sampling is from "Remuda":
In the afterlife the cattle lick my father's hand. He in turn licks them. Here there is further resurrection.... and somewhere the Holy Ghost pulling tongues off the old meat carts that were first to open the gate.
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