shadow call when shadow fell
one walks so that the shadow always falls
ahead one is walking in order and the grass is greener
toward the forest, it catches the last light
in the throat on a match dismantles the pasture
the pieces alight and asunder the smallest
pieces tucked under the tongue
march off, the fonder
In the poem-sequence Stele (Sausalito CA:
The Post-Apollo Press, 2012), American poet Cole Swensen has composed a book
far different than many of her poetry collections of the past few years. For the record, her poetry collections to date include: It’s
Alive She Says (Floating Island Press, 1984), New Math (William
Morrow & Co., 1988), Park (Floating Island Press, 1991), Numen
(Burning Deck Press, 1995), Noon (Sun & Moon Press, 1997), Try
(University of Iowa Press, 1999), Oh (Apogee Press, 2000), Such Rich
Hour (University of Iowa Press, 2001), Goest (Alice James Books,
2004), The Book of a Hundred Hands (University of Iowa Press, 2005), The
Glass Age (Alice James Books, 2007), Ours: poems on the gardens of Andre
Le Notre (University of California Press, 2008), greensward (Ugly
Duckling Presse, 2010) and Gravesend (University of California Press, 2012). [I've reviewed a number of these over the years. Click on Cole Swensen's name underneath to see previous posts] At least
her past half dozen poetry titles have each been composed across the canvas of
a particular idea or theme, with individual poems existing as fragments of a
larger whole, articulating a poem-as-essay. Instead, Stele composes an
ongoing sentence, a lyric binary of small repetitions in a suite of three. A
suite of three, with nine pieces in the first section, ten in the second, and
eleven in the third, and final, section. As the back cover quote by Norma Cole
writes, “two eerily different musical scores.” Not that this is her first
suite; the musical tone of Stele is reminiscent of her opera-laden Oh.
Much like Oh, this is a far shorter suite than many of her book-length
titles. With but forty pages of text, the first poem of this graceful and
enviable little book sets the tone of the collection as a whole, a particular
kind of doubling effect, in which one can read the poem as broken lines, or two
poems in parallel. The effect is breathtaking.
from a distance seems to be walking
and so becomes a man and so the man
in his silence therefore these hills and hills
in their ceaseless every surface of
the eye in its folding
and disappears an evening of
folded hands
as if the folded hands of the statue had
too many fingers making them look oddly
feathered and thus so much less
contained or able to
be contained
very good post
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