April 8, 2023

Willie James King

SPECULATIVE

So, this is the New South
where whites attend Parks’
funeral in multitudes, yet
send their own children to
separate schools. She died
in poverty, which means,
she was poor in cents
but rich in spirit. So don’t
tell me about change, or
how hard they are trying
while racism wreaks havoc
still, like AIDS, diabetes
that kill; there’s no cure.
Alabama ought to be our
nation’s Athens now. Yet,
most will want to avoid this.
I’ll tell you, I am infused by
so many different races I
almost had all that’s African
erased from me. Yes I want
philosophy, and papillons
in my poems, to focus on
what’s wrong with our being
in Iraq, without wondering
as to who’s got my back.
I would love to be far more
speculative with syllogisms
and not here writing about lies
bigotry, or about what hate is.

from Rattle #31, Summer 2009
Tribute to African American Poets

__________

Willie James King: “I write only compelled to do so. Writing is hard, that is why I love it. Language is as difficult to control as any animal found in the deep, wild woods. They don’t conform. They hold to what they do best, no matter how we holler: Humanity! Humanity! And that is why I write; I might be able to speak not only for myself, but for those without a voice; or, who they think they are, etc.”

Rattle Logo

August 11, 2016

Willie James King

THE EXISTENTIAL SELF

Once in a while an owl barks
above the black bog, and I turn
another page of a big book
that was written by a Russian
who tells an interesting tale
about a woman who cheats
on her husband, and who throws
herself before a train. If not a knife
or a gun, who hasn’t thought of
leaping from some point that’s final,
if only no more than a moment.
Outside, the wind moans
like a brooding woman
who is in constant conversation
with that owl as both know
the night is theirs. I put aside
the huge text to turn a phrase
that might become a poem, that
might capture my feelings, only as
close as words can come to naming,
or exacting the existential self

from Rattle #18, Winter 2002
Tribute to Teachers

Rattle Logo

May 31, 2014

Willie James King

SELF-AUTOPSY OF A CRAZED MAN

I was living through a breakdown
and didn’t know it, had a good
job and just up and quit; a blue-
haze almost always hanging
about my head, making me wish
that I was dead. A man, wasted
by matters set forth by his own
hand, but I am still here. I rode
the storm alone, in a crisis that
must have caused Christ to
tremble at all of the terrible things
which I was tempted. All of those
pills, doctor bills, coupled with all
of those which kept my phone
ringing from hard-working collectors
persistent as the pain I couldn’t pin
down with all of that pride which
caused me to keep the hurt inside
and couldn’t make myself believe
I should seek some help I never
thought I’d need, before I broke
my own heart, and caused
too many others to bleed.

from Rattle #20, Winter 2003

Rattle Logo

April 20, 2010

Review by Willie James KingAt the Threshold of Alchemy

AT THE THRESHOLD OF ALCHEMY
by John Amen

Presa Press
P.O. Box 792
Rockford, Michigan 49341
ISBN 978-0-9800081-5-9
2009, 85 pp., $ 13.95
www.presapress.com

“Purpose,” the first of 42 poems in At the Threshold of Alchemy, the third collection of poems by John Amen, is aptly placed, because the persona in this poem deftly defines the alchemist’s task, which is that of helping us to find the panacea that will transform us from a state metal into a state of gold. It is the very first poem, in which the speaker says:

Body, slave to gravity and the passage of time,
is not the thing to which I dedicate songs. I have
dressed the eternal in the fig leaf of the ephemeral,
but how delicate, this balance. How thick, these
defenses. Truly, I am in love with what pulses
beneath blush and bone. Courting what never sleeps,
what gives rise to mortal dreams….

Another brilliant move Amen makes in this collection is commingling images that are mythological, biblical, as well as those involving cultures, i.e., East and West. For instance, in the poem, “Both of Evil,” the speaker says:

At first, autonomy was encouraged. That changed
after the rift, when He banished his eldest. A sarcasm
circulated, that He would have blamed Lucifer’s mother
had that been possible, but clearly we were all immaculate
extensions of Him, knew what we were afraid to say,
that He couldn’t bear to see Himself echoed in Lucifer
and so chose to oust him….

In the short, but pithy, and poignant poem, “father,” we find the speaker pleading for intervention, compassion, a reason to further believe and witness, asking, as many are asking now, in Haiti, Chile, in the wake of disasters, “father, truly where art thou?/ your subterfuges and tireless rage, the/ volcanoes in your abdomen. blinded in the November leaves, left to/ wander a gauntlet of breasts and high-pitched voices, i stutter in the/ darkness, offering my prayers to an effigy.” We can identify with the speaker’s discontent, and his distrust as to whether of not the deity worshipped, sought after here, is for or against him; after which he has cause to question his own power as human. He asks, “With which generation did the/ hand of man become synonymous with destruction?”

There are the “Portraits of Mary,” poems that consist of twenty. These are well-
crafted poems. The Mary in these poems is the mother of Christ and the persona’s
earthly lover, at once. In the first of these poems, numbered i., he observes:

Mary in Clifton Park beside a crape myrtle:
Her capacity for heartache, her lack of self-
Consciousness: I’m humbled. Mary riding

A riptide of tears, dancer on a browning landscape,
Goddess of joy, arrow lodged in her spine,
Drunk on disappointment. Is she real?

In the two previous tercets, one finds that the erotic and the divine are twisted, intertwined also, in an brilliant use of double-entendre.

Whether the image in these poems is mythological, biblical, Western, or Eastern , the poet weaves each interchangeably with images that are mundane in order to create a world where all are interspersed. We see this clearly in the opening lines of the second in this twenty-poem sequence, which reads: “Mary stirs up the dormant chi—essential oils,/ chants at noon, statues of Ganesha and Shiva.” Then, in the fourth in the last sentence, the speakers offers this: “I slithered/Through lifetimes to find you,/ Mary, mercurial-Athena, chameleon-Venus, my cosmopolitan gal.”

The poems that make up this fine collection are metaphorically daring, lyrical, and lush. Neither word nor image is wasted here. In “Missive # 18,” one is mesmerized by the poet’s insight, his accurate use of language as demonstrated in these lines: “Despiteyour magnolia plans, civil servants/ still conspire by the coffee pot. Ants writhe/ in the doughnut box. I’m certainly not interested/ in souvenirs or anything to do with figs. Your/ mouth is an azalea, your tongue the bloom of sin./ Ditto, shadow man. Appetite is quite incorrigible./ Pluto never blinks.” And, in “what I haul along,” the images are razor-sharp. One must pay attention as the words in these poems offer a magical blend of immediacy to experience, as these that are offered: “my mother is eve is my wife. Her footprints have hardened in the soft clay/ of my brain. She removes me from he will. Fluffs my knee prints from the/ cushion at the foot of her bed. Lifetimes later, the sky still rumbles when i/ draw thin lines in the moss, retrieve my testicles from lockboxes and/ cadenzas of despair….”

The poems in At the Threshold of Alchemy are love poems. Many demand several readings due to the poet’s intricate style, his broad use of imagery that make up his tropes. I highly recommend this book to all.

____________

Willie James King’s poems appear in such journals as Alehouse, America, Obsidian, Southern Poetry Review, Willow Review, and many others. His current book is The House in the Heart, by Tebot Bach, with a foreword by Cathy-Smith Bowers.

Rattle Logo

July 25, 2009

Review by Willie James King

CRAZY LOVE
by Pamela Uschuk

Wings Press
627 E Guenther
San Antonio, TX 78210-1134
ISBN 978- 0- 916727- 58- 1
2009, 102 pp., $16.00
www.wingspress.com

When the head and heart are one, nothing is impossible. Pamela Uschuk’s fifth full-length volume of poems does more than allude. Crazy Love skillfully shores up the poet’s keen observation of mankind, as well as her understanding of the natural world; she juxtaposes both to forge only one. And the speaker is not merely in dialogue with herself and this world, but is very much aware that the reader is also there, which makes these poems three-dimensional. Whether or not the reader refuses to participate in such subtleties, one cannot help but reach for answers to the fine metaphorical touchstones registered while on this sojourn: “The hemlock loses the tanager,/ a bright streak/ in a whirling gauze of snow./ Where do we go?” the speaker posits early on, in the opening of the first poem, “The Horseman Of The Crass And Vulnerable Word.”  And in the very next line: “ You told me the eye was lost.” So, she becomes “the eye.” She knows someone has to see in order to save us where blind spots cause us to blunder, to commit atrocities, pogroms.

In “With Its Toll Of Char,” the reader gets to observe a fox kneeling above its mate, struck by a car in New York, where the speaker says: “This fox is real./ It’s dangerous you say,/ to swerve/ for animals caught on the ice.” Later, in the last stanza: “The fox might have started sooner/ from my on-coming car, but he stood/ taking her scent a last time/ that common night/ none of us could any longer take for granted.” One finds in the expediency of the language and crisp clarity of the tropes in “The Horseman Of The Crass And Vulnerable Word” that these are not mere nature poems, but poems that engage the reader on a personal level. One finds, when closely examining these, that there isn’t anything that is not nature. As soon as one begins to see and to understand his relationship to the natural world, he will find that his own life depends on everything else about him on this planet, no less than Native Americans knew all along.

Continue reading

Rattle Logo