July 31st, 2011
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Ilyse Kusnetz
MATCH GIRLS
In the factories of
America during
the 19th century, girls
hired to make
sulfur matches
would dip the matchends
into a chemical
vat, then lick the tips
to make them stiff.
The vats were filled
with zinc sulfide,
a radioactive substance
about which no one
warned them, so when
their teeth fell out,
and their jaws and bodies
rotted like bad fruit,
it was too late.
It was not the first time
such things happened.
Bent at their stations,
hatmakers in the 18th century
cured ladies’ hats
with mercury. Their legacy—
blushing, aching limbs,
a plague of rashes,
parchment-thin
pages of sloughed
skin, curled and cracked,
minds deranged.
They could not know
they shared a fate
with the Emperor
Qin Shi Huang, who
seeking eternal life,
swallowed pills
laced with mercury.
He built the Great Wall
and unified China,
then outlawed and
burned treatises
on history, art, politics,
and all religions
not sanctioned by the state.
Scholars who dared
possess such things,
he buried alive.
His body lies
in a vast mausoleum,
guarded by
a terracotta army.
Of the factory girls,
mouths opening
soundlessly below earth,
their bodies burning like
forbidden books,
we know almost nothing.
–from Rattle #34, Winter 2010
July 30th, 2011
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Review by Beth Browne
SACRED GRAFFITI
by Florence Weinberger
Tebot Bach
Box 7887
Huntington Beach, CA 92615-7887
ISBN 978-1-8936706-0-0
2010, 77pp., $15.00
www.tebotbach.org
In one of those small world coincidences that pepper my life, I first learned of Malibu poet Florence Weinberger when she entered one of the North Carolina Poetry Society contests I was administering. She had learned about our Caldwell Nixon Jr. Award (poems by adults written for children) from one of our previous judges when I suggested she promote it for us among her students and colleagues.
For a poet I learned about from one of her poems for children, I was expecting much lighter fare. Instead, I found this deeply fulfilling and engaging book full of resonant and profound poems. Each one is like a rich gem, leaving the reader satisfied but ready for more. The book is divided into five sections introduced by a quote.
The first section revolves around the theme of art and is introduced by this thought-provoking quote by novelist George Sand:
Art for the sake of the true, art for the sake of the good and the beautiful, that is the faith I am searching for.
From filmmaking to poetry, these poems reverberate with insight into various art forms, artists and life itself. The title poem, “Sacred Graffiti,” referencing painter Mark Rothko, is contained in this section and concludes with these haunting lines:
When some men brood and grow bitter, their tainted truths bleed
sorrow’s flowers. We must love them so hard, we grow calm.
O, smudged and smoking heart.
With a foray into the worlds of sculpture and music, there are also several poems about poets and poetry, my personal favorite being the more intimate “Out of Words,” recounting Weinberger’s experience writing poetry.
I used to finish a poem and have words left over
that I could eat the next day, cold, or recoverenough to brew a distillate, to which I’d add hunger,
the sting of single syllables, a pinch of rigor…
The section concludes with an evocative poem on the theme of cave painting called “The Birth of Art.”
The second section is introduced by a quote from the eighteenth century English author, Samuel Johnson:
The use of traveling is to regulate imagination by reality, and instead of thinking how things may be, to see them as they are.
Starting with a hitchhiker and taking us on a journey from China to Texas with stops in North Korea, Europe and Andalusia, this section is far-flung and colorful. One of my favorites is “The North Korean Bride:”
She believes god
made her a woman,
clever with bones
so she might live.Taught her to turn them
into savory soup,
adding little more
than vapor and spice.Taught her to turn
the bones of her body
into dollars, pay a broker
to slip her into China.
The concluding poem, “Texas Synchronicity,” was inspired by Weinberger’s visit to a museum in Texas. The poem takes the reader many unexpected places, including this:
De Kooning went right on painting
after he’d lost his mind,
which doesn’t explain my presence in
Dallas, or why I looked down
Dealey Plaza, trying to guess
the distance from the window
to the back of Kennedy’s head.
Part Three is a surprisingly personal section, beginning with an intriguing quote from Victor Hugo, of all people:
No one ever keeps a secret so well as a child.
The poems in this section are very personal with references to Weinberger’s childhood, World War II and both her mother and father. This section also contains my favorite poem of the collection: an unforgettable little thing titled, “Pots,” which a friend, upon my reading it to her, said gave her chills. The poem seems the opposite of many of the poems in the collection in that it takes a very simple thing and makes it reflect the most complicated of emotions. The other poems do the opposite very successfully. They take something very complicated–“Hebrew sorrow,” “Agapanthus, Jacaranda, Bougainvillea,” “A Present I Didn’t Know I Wanted”–and distill them into something simple, wistful and poignant, their very essence. This is the particular genius of Weinberger’s work in this book and possibly the goal of any serious poet.
In addition, Weinberger exhibits particular skill with words, no excess, no misstep, just the precise word to evoke the exact tone and feeling she wants to convey. Whether she’s talking about her father “fingering” a cigarette, or the “purple umbrels of agapanthus,” the reader is instantly delivered to the exact image of what Weinberger is trying to impart. The poems are not full of unnecessary or overwrought words, but she has a knack for producing an unusual word, perfect for her purpose. I’m sure Weinberger took particular care in the arrangement of this book, with the heaviest, deepest section in the middle, easing out of it with the following section, prefaced by this quote from Henry James:
Summer afternoon – summer afternoon; to me those have always been the two most beautiful words in the English language.
But the transition is not abrupt. Weinberger seems to sense the reader’s need to be brought up gently, so the section starts with the melancholy musing on a butterfly trapped under the eaves, not dire and savage, but slightly sad, with a hint of hope. Easing along with poems about thirty-six cents and humming in a supermarket, Weinberger exercises her sense of humor, which is self-effacing and understated. But the book is not a humorous one, and the poems quickly revert to Weinberger’s usual seriousness. A particularly plaintive one being “Landscape with Wounded Bird” :
In this other life I live,
I pick up the bird and bring it home –
it nestles near my heart as if it could
assume the beat –
The section ends with a classic Weinberger, “Honeydew In Season”:
How can I hold a ghost of what is falling away, passing
from a full mouth into a swoon of ripe happiness.
From here the book sails on to its satisfying conclusion in the final section prefaced with this concise quote from Ralph Waldo Emerson:
It is time to be old…
A section that seems to be about both love and aging, two concepts which often seem to be mutually exclusive in our frantically youth obsessed culture, these poems are frank and often startling, as in this one, my friend’s favorite:
Young people think
old people having sex
is funny.Sometimes it is.
Very funny.
Other times it is sublime.
Sacred Graffiti is not the work of a novice, but rather a highly skilled wordsmith, meting out her lines with careful precision and creating a work of soulful pleasure. Ms. Weinberger is surely a force to be reckoned with.
_____________
Beth Browne: “Why do I love poetry? Because I could never get that damn wheelbarrow out of my head. That and the plums. Because my grandfather composed poems on his prescription pads and my father wrote limericks on cocktail napkins. Because I still have them and because I can still see the rainwater and the chickens.” (womenswrites@inbox.com)
July 29th, 2011
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Michael Kriesel
AS CRICKETS CHIP AWAY THE LIGHT
I quit the news, turning my back on the world
except for the weather robot on the radio:
chrome manikin sitting all day, all night
at a gray metal desk in a white broadcast booth
reading the page of our future over and over
into an old microphone big as a silver cucumber.
His monotone of highs and lows soothes me.
He’s always there doing his job, not beating his
platinum wife or confessing some sordid affair
with an orange Cuisinart to the priest
who listened to our hearts for fifty years.
People don’t want to grow up he confessed,
when asked what he learned in that dim cubicle.
I lotus too long on the floor and my foot falls asleep.
A frost advisory follows me into the kitchen.
I hop on one leg. This could have been heaven,
except for humans over-farming Eden’s fertile plains.
There’s always some Solomon cutting down Lebanon’s cedars,
building a house for a God who moves on.
It’s getting dark. I snag a beer and stumble out.
Crickets chip away the light, drowning out
the droning voice in the house behind me.
Squatting on the steps, I watch a line
of fireflies stream the interstate,
remembering a firefight a friend confessed,
a navy buddy. We were drinking Mad Dog 20/20
when he told me how the tracers in
the river’s mirror were an eerie beauty.
I press the sweaty can against my neck
and stare at a cattail’s frozen explosion.
We’re more than just a tribe of monkeys
writing angry haiku. It matters, what we do.
–from Rattle #34, Winter 2010
July 28th, 2011
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Jerry Kraft
SUCH MUSIC AS THIS
“These people didn’t do anything
to be like this,” said Bill, who looks
more like a truck-driver, or maybe
a short-order cook, than the old pro
who has cared for these people
for so many years. “They just got
shit on by God, so we help them.”
Kindness is a given to work here,
patience, gentleness, attention—
a certain world view that looks
deeper than others would, adapts,
accepts and performs whatever tasks
can satisfy fundamental needs. No
deep philosophy, except to do what
needs doing, and do it right, and
then do it again tomorrow.
Developmentally Disabled, a term
with little description for reasons
as diverse as their realities, as delicate
and incomprehensible. What does it mean,
infantile intelligence, to be pre-linguistic
and blind, and to interact with your world
by hitting your head with your fist, or making
shrill dolphin sounds, or just chewing
on a blanket, and rocking, or bouncing,
or shouting in a curse beyond words…
Arms around him, Bill sings “You Are My Sunshine”
in his rough, sweet voice, until violent movement
stops, and the boy stares into his vast darkness,
silent, motionless, listening to this slight melody
of what we are here to do for each other.
–from Rattle #34, Winter 2010
July 27th, 2011
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Diane Klammer
THESE ARE THE RULES
What matters most is how well
you walk through the fire.
—Charles Bukowski
The whole world may be burning
around you,
but you have knowingly
chosen this.
You must confront the blizzard
with a tattered umbrella.
These are the rules.
You must stop the gaping
head wound
with only a tiny circular band aid.
You do not have more
and you cannot do less.
This is the choice you make:
to wash it with your tears,
wring it out,
and begin again.
Eventually it may stick.
The role you take
is only as a guide.
Your patient is the one
who struggles each day
through the snow and the wind
but for the band aid,
naked.
–from Rattle #34, Winter 2010
