It’s enough to make one envious, to see poets with hardcover poetry collections. For her third poetry collection, The King (New York NY: W.W. Norton, 2009), New York poet and editor Rebecca Wolff works through “a lyrical map of the maternal mind” through seven sections of indirect directness, writing straight ahead lines that go occasionally twisty, writing mothering, motherhood and all else that comes.
Content is King
I queen it
over emptiness.
I invent it, a surplus,
a bombast of nervous
encryption so the process
of blanking becomes
isometric—Pilates.
I think of how clueless
and relentless-
ly depthless
my mother, nonetheless
she birthed and hers
is the aspect
and prospect
the matter
and subject
and
gangway.
I find something to say.
The king is content.
There are so many books of poetry about being a new parent, or being in a new relationship, that it becomes hard to make such interesting and/or unique. How is it so many of these fall apart in the writing, holding so tight to the sentiment that all else is squeezed out? Wolff, against type, manages to write with a serious lightness that makes the language sing, and the world come alive through her own wonderings, her own queries and the way she moves through contemplating just how she got where she managed to be, with partner and child. There are parts of this collection that remind of the poetry of New York poet Rachel Zucker as well, through Wolff’s direct line, Wolff’s direct statement questioning, whether partner, child, and all else that becomes.
There are Certain Relationships That I
Don’t Understand
to this house
(I own it)
to this boy
(I made him, his whole body)
What is my relationship to the man’s sleeping head
I don’t know him
And the mother
(regarded, regretted, enabled, held the door)
Content is King
I queen it
over emptiness.
I invent it, a surplus,
a bombast of nervous
encryption so the process
of blanking becomes
isometric—Pilates.
I think of how clueless
and relentless-
ly depthless
my mother, nonetheless
she birthed and hers
is the aspect
and prospect
the matter
and subject
and
gangway.
I find something to say.
The king is content.
There are so many books of poetry about being a new parent, or being in a new relationship, that it becomes hard to make such interesting and/or unique. How is it so many of these fall apart in the writing, holding so tight to the sentiment that all else is squeezed out? Wolff, against type, manages to write with a serious lightness that makes the language sing, and the world come alive through her own wonderings, her own queries and the way she moves through contemplating just how she got where she managed to be, with partner and child. There are parts of this collection that remind of the poetry of New York poet Rachel Zucker as well, through Wolff’s direct line, Wolff’s direct statement questioning, whether partner, child, and all else that becomes.
There are Certain Relationships That I
Don’t Understand
to this house
(I own it)
to this boy
(I made him, his whole body)
What is my relationship to the man’s sleeping head
I don’t know him
And the mother
(regarded, regretted, enabled, held the door)
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