PHOTOGRAPH #1
This is a photograph of a domestic interior. Because
this ghost manifested primarily in an auditory manner, it is hard to see
anything of significance in this photo. Note however the ghost’s baby tooth
crumbling in a dish on the kitchen counter (foreground) and further back in the
room, the boom box that went on at random times, always when there was a Harry
Potter story tape in it.
American poet Elizabeth Robinson’s newest poetry title [see my review of her previous title here] is the absolutely gorgeously-produced hardcover On Ghosts (New York NY: Solid Objects,
2013). Given the label “poetry/essay” on the back cover, On Ghosts shifts Robinson’s structure into the territory of
American poet Cole Swensen, constructing a sequence of poems around a central
thesis or subject, although Swensen might have held the “Explanatory Note” that
opens Robinson’s collection back, slipping it into the ends of the final book. And
yet, the deceptively-titled opening note feels less separate from the
collection as simply the first in a series of pieces that make up the
collection. As the “Explanatory Note” opens:
This is an essay on the phenomenon of ghosts
and haunting. It arises in relation to the possibility that a self or a site
might be haunted. I do not take this phenomenon to be negative or positive,
only neutral. As I understand it, this occurrence reveals little about phantoms
and visitations and is more disclosive of conditions that locate themselves in
specific sites or persons. These conditions calibrate individuals or places,
make them vulnerable to the heightened perception, which is hauntedness.
Being haunted, becoming aware of the presence
of presence, would in some sense be ordinary then. The perceiver might be a sieve
that experience falls through. The perceiver might be a mirror bouncing light
from one source into the mundane world of his or her daily life. I posit that
both things take place at once.
There
is something interesting in the way she wraps the entirety of the work around a
central theme, thesis or idea, suggesting both a looseness between the
individual pieces, and a tightness to the work as a singular whole. This is a
structure her books have been working up towards for some time, such as her
recent Counterpart (Ahsahta Press,
2012) [see my review of such here] and Three Novels (Omnidawn, 2011) [see my review of such here], each suggesting the
kind of structures that pull to the fore of On
Ghosts; each of the collections cohere more openly and obviously around an
idea, and do become just as much essay as a collection of poems. “Another child
speculates that it is in the nature of the ghost to / be broken.” she writes,
to open the poem “The Relation of Mother and Child / to Haunting and Ghost.” The
essay/poems in this collection are exactly what the title promises, and a book
in which the questions and the study itself appears to hold more attention than
any kind of singular, simple answer. Through the poems, Robinson speculates,
but offers very few conclusions, but for the spaces between the pieces
themselves. Constructed predominantly through prose/prose-poems, On Ghosts works through a series of
incidents, reports and photographs, allowing the conclusions to reveal
themselves slowly, themselves nearly ghost-like and ephemeral. As she writes to
open the poem “Definitely Documentary”: “Narrative is a falsification, but
still, inside it, strange things begin to happen. The following should be
considered as documentary.”
Analogy:
You can arrange the page and enumerate all the
propositions you like, but this is a page, and words may irritate its surface,
dog-ear and crease it, but they will never truly impact the surface, and they
will never escape their page.
Perhaps this is a spurious analogy.
Elsewhere we studied the writer, and we asked,
What was his body, what was his soul, what was the word to him? We concluded
that the word, his word or words, was like an autoimmune disease which attacked
him, the word’s own organism, his soul and his body. This may be the better
analogy.
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