November 25, 2012

Review by Arthur McMasterIn Beauty Bright by Gerald Stern

IN BEAUTY BRIGHT
by Gerald Stern

W.W. Norton
500 Fifth Avenue
New York, New York 10110
ISBN: 978-0-393-08644-7
2012, 128 pp., $25.95
www.wwnorton.com

In the often breathless, stream-of-consciousness-poems of Gerald Stern all observations, perhaps like politics, are local. The man’s senses are acute. This, the poet’s seventeenth volume, is apportioned into three parts, although there seems to be nothing thematic that separates or unites them. That said, the poems become less abstract as we move along.

In a representative poem of Part I, titled “Aliens,” Guatemalans are afoot in New York City. They contemplate the flower mart “sitting by the ice machine and there the /  bargaining takes place…” But bargaining for what lies just out of reach for the reader. For way-out-of-towners, any activity in the city is maybe worthy of scrutiny. Most poems in this first section are frankly unlyrical, asyntactical. They make little sense, rather like dreams that appear vivid and imagistic, but no one can say what they mean, come dawn.

Fragments and allusions can work well in the body of lyrical poems as long as the reader has some sense of direction, something tangible to grasp, rather as Emily Dickinson used the word “spar” to suggest a load bearing device or structure. The title poem, “In Beauty Bright,” concludes this peculiar series with a wave to William Blake and his delightful, four-line poem, from his 1908 volume Songs of Experience, “The Lily.” Thorny as this section of Mr. Stern’s book may be, brightness looms just ahead.

The return to poetry terra firma comes with Part II. Whatever the poet was up to over his first fifty-six pages or so, the verbal dyspepsia has passed and we now get some terrific work. Not that Stern wants the reader to catch much of a breath: these move fast. They weave and enchant. Consider “Iberia,” one of the most beguiling.

I have been here so long I remember Salazar
and how he tortured my four main poets in Portugal
with his ‘moral truth and patriotic principles,’
and fatherless Coughlin and all the old bastards
that stretched in one great daisy chain from the coast
of California east, and east to New York
and London and thence across Eurasia to God knows
what small moral and patriotic islands
so listen to me for once and hate for good
all moral islands, and if you haven’t done so,
already add my Pessoa to your Lorca.

It’s brilliant on several fronts, including the recollection of Portugal’s coup, in 1936, that brought Dr. António Salazar to power bleating for “social justice.” But what fascinates me here all the more, as a cranky academic, is the hidden conjunction of old Walt Whitman and his mid-19th Century work for both the Portuguese Fernando Pessoa (writing as Álvaro de Campos) and the Spaniard Garcia Lorca. It is doubtful the two poets ever met. Surely Gerald Stern knows this, but he tempts Dear Reader to locate the shared energy, if not the “moral islands,” that fix the poem. Iberia, as title, of course covers both nations, muting the anomaly. Bravo, sir!

What else? I am at least half, if not three-quarters, enchanted with Stern’s wonderfully sublimated political commentary such as we find in the poem “Hyena” (epigraph Richard Nixon). Try to keep the image of hyena in mind as you read. Here we go:

The fact that his front legs were longer than his rear
or should I say his arms, it made it possible
while hunching over—-shouldering—-to give the
two-handed V for Victory signs and do his
smiling just before he boarded the airplane.
Stupidity I, but made it hard to drink
his tea unless he doubled his wrist but such
it is for hyenas when they leave the capital
and such it is they grin—-I saw his death
in Chicago over four hundred television stations,
eating ice cream and waiting: there was only
one poet in the whole airport going from
station to station crying “asshole” and watching
his friend Clinton drop a tear for him
in 1993, and ah, you didn’t have
Hyena to kick around much any longer.

See how much political fun you can have with poems that embrace anthropological whimsy. There are many more excellent poems within Stern’s highly eclectic volume, especially so in the final section. “Angle of Death” reimagines the poet Celan and the death of Rembrandt. But the one I will come back to is “Creeley,” for the late poet of the Black Mountain College, a poem dedicated to James Haba, founding director of the Dodge Poetry Festival. Robert Creeley, in the mind’s eye of the poet, swallows 2000 stars in his “unbearable sadness” while Bly, Olds, and Levine cannot help. Must leave him to his melancholy. Perhaps the image is apt, though once—it would be wrong of me to deny it—I did see the man smile.

____________

Arthur McMaster’s volumes of poetry include Awkwardness (South Carolina Poetry Initiative), and The Spy Who Came Down with a Cold. He teaches at Converse College and is Contributing Editor for Poets’ Quarterly.

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March 25, 2010

Review by Ross Losapio

SAVE THE LAST DANCESave the Last Dance by Gerald Stern
by Gerald Stern

W. W. Norton & Company
500 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10110
ISBN 978-0-393-33731-0
2009, 91 pp., $13.95
www.wwnorton.com

…it is
what it is – and you will look at it, you and me,
and say ‘that’s right’’ not even, ‘that’s what I had
in mind’…
(“The Preacher”)

Gerald Stern is a master of his craft. With over a dozen collections of poetry to his name, he proves with his latest, Save the Last Dance, that he remains at the top of his game. Stern’s love for the topics of his poems is profound and he commits these subjects to writing with such confidence and proficiency that the reader cannot help but adopt his vision.

That is not to say that Stern’s poetry will not challenge the reader. His imagery is visceral and communicates a great deal; however, his narrative style is often perplexing. Poems such as “1950,” “The Truth,” and “Bronze Roosters” appear to begin in mid-sentence, or even mid-thought. In addition, the poet ends many of his works with a sense of abrupt curtailment that can be frustrating:

you know the details, the porches pulled you up,
your face turned white at a certain point, I’m sure
you walked through a cloud how slow you learned how absurd
the goats of Arcady or the baskets of apples
in New Jerusalem compared to that.
(“What For?”)

In this instance, the reader is reigned in like an errant horse. It can be a shocking experience when a new comparison or image coincides with the poem’s end, forcing a period of doubt and reflection that can be uncomfortable for casual readers. Meaning may only be discerned after multiple readings, but the potential reward is great.

Stern never assumes an air of superiority in his writing. His verse is full of self-deprecation and self-revision. At times, he alters a fact or event in the very next line of a poem, claiming that it sounds better a certain way or that a detail had been omitted. This style causes a familiar relationship to be forged; the reader feels as if Stern is right there alongside him or her, muddling through the details and trying to make sense of it all at the same time.

To speak in a broad sense, Save the Last Dance is all about holes–actual, mental, and metaphysical. This theme winds its way quietly throughout the book, though it may only be obvious in the final piece. It elegantly ties the collection together as a cohesive whole. Conceptually, the hole is most thoroughly explored in the dialogue of “The Preacher.” The speaker responds to Peter, his companion, explaining what holes mean to his work:

                                                   ‘My figures
always start with the literal and the spreading
is like blood spreading,’ I say, ‘and as for the wound it
comes from growing up with coal, the murder
of everything green, rivers burning, cities
emptied, humans herded, the vile thinking
of World War I and II, the hole in England,
the hole in Germany and what we can’t en-
dure…’

The hole, in this passage, is a deficit that is deeply personal and also universal to mankind: that nagging want which drives the poet to write. The hole, though, can serve a purpose, can produce something beautiful. In “Flute” and “Flute II,” Stern marvels at the fact that it is the vessel for music and all its moods and representations. The mysterious woman at the focus of these poems produces spring and light, joy and gloom from the depths of her hollow instrument.

…I am wavering
at only reliving though what is hard is being there-
I don’t know what the Germans called it, existing,
non-existing, both at once, there is a
rose explaining it, or it’s a table…
(“Traveling Backwards”)

Stern is able to present his idea of a hole subtly as well. In “Traveling Backwards” he conveys it without a proper name by obliquely defining it as existence and non-existence coinciding. A hole, after all, is defined by its own absence, an emptiness. This piece also displays the poet’s humility. He readily admits when something is beyond his description, even laments it at times, but, somehow, manages to depict it anyway. In this way, the reader goes through the same mental exercises, ultimately arriving at Stern’s assessment.

Of course, sometimes a hole is just a hole: a place by the side of the road to bury a fawn, struck accidentally by a car, as in “My Dear.” Gerald Stern, lest the reader forget, is a great lover of life. His poems are tribute and sacrifice to the numerous and ever-multiplying objects of his love: elm trees, old friends, spaghetti, and, especially, animals. The fawn becomes a member of the family and Stern’s language in describing its death is devastating. His most profound descriptions are reserved for these creatures. For example, the collection’s namesake poem, “Save the Last Dance for Me” concerns a Chihuahua that the speaker must rescue from an uncovered sewer:

Jésus, kiss me again,
Jésus, you saved me,
Jésus, I can’t forget you;
and what was her name who gave me
the towel? and who was I?
and what is love doing in
a sewer, and how is disgrace
blurred now, or buried?

The woman who charges him with rescuing the dog is forgettable. Even the speaker’s own identity comes into question as the poem concludes, but the Chihuahua has a name and a distinctive character. In being rescued, it loves the speaker so fiercely, creates such an impact, that it is remembered and personified long after other details about the event have been lost forever.

Throughout Save the Last Dance, Gerald Stern writes with a selflessness that is both refreshing and disconcerting. His work is absolutely concerned with his subject and the moment in which it exists. As a result, the reader will feast on the imagery employed and the devotion evident in Stern’s writing. Consequently, it can be difficult to frame individual poems, initially, with a clear narrative as the poet endeavors to truthfully replicate what he perceives. Those willing to work a little harder and read a little more carefully, however, will find it to be a rich experience. Gerald Stern is a commanding presence in contemporary poetry, the evidence of which lies in this collection.

______________

Ross Losapio is a New Jersey native and graduate of Loyola University Maryland where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Writing and English. His poetry has formerly been published in Soundings East, Italian Americana,and, most recently, in the Fall 2009 issue of Interrobang?! Magazine. He has also self-published a chapbook of poems entitled The Measure of Healing.

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