SARVIS
I’ve seen the
Sarvis bloom
diaphanous
white from far off
while the
mountainside
is still
brown
It’s almost
Japanese
though I’ve
yet to see
white on white
blooms over
snow
A kind of canny lullaby
A historic
caution
Sarvis is the
way the old folks say
Service – as in when the
circuit rider
preacher
came through
after ice thaw
to conduct
weddings, baptisms
and funerals
that he
couldn’t reach sooner
before the
first breath of spring
alighted
When Uncle
Dudley was a boy
brightly he
brought his mother a branch
flowering
white
and because
she had showed him
an earlier
flower which she named
The First
Breath of Spring
He said,
Look! Mama!
Here is
Here is
The Second breath of Spring
As the press
release states for American poet and filmmaker Lee Ann Brown’s third solo trade
poetry collection, In the Laurels, Caught
(Albany NY: Fence Books, 2013), this collection “is a collection of
lighthearted, deep rooted-poems written around the Appalachian region of North Carolina in Madison County.” Composed by an “adventurous, intellectually restless
native” and “transplanted outsider,” Brown explores the details of a geography
through its spoken language. Recognizing both the arbitrariness and
specificness of place, Brown’s poetic study is reminiscent of the work of Arkansas poet C.D. Wright, or the Ontario Gothic of Phil Hall, exploring the dialect for
the sake of exploring the stories, storytelling and myths of this fraction of
the American south. Through Brown’s study, the words, phrases and references
she weaves throughout her poems speak to the culture and the population of the
area, from the sing-song lilt of casual speech and laid back conversation to
the rougher ends of such a folk-collection of country music. The collection
opens with both a travelling companion, Lorine Niedecker, and an open,
uncertain eye, one attempting to gather as much and as quickly as possible
before beginning to settle into the poems. It almost reads as though Brown was channeling
Niedecker to help open the potential manuscript, channeling Niedecker’s scientific
approach to writing her own “pastoral” in exploring natural and human histories
through the poem, such as in her own poem “Lake Superior” [see my review of the recent edition of Niedecker’s Lake Superior title here].
RURAL SURREAL
lorine niedecker
wanted to get
away from the anecdotal
into an arc
of sound
vertical
cicada skins
we’d wear as
pins
circadian
skins
we’d swear as
kin
The author of
two previous trade works – Polyverse (Los
Angeles CA: Sun and Moon, 1999) and The Sleep That Changed Everything (Wesleyan University Press, 2003), as well as
numerous chapbooks – Lee Ann Browns’ In the Laurels, Caught is a polyvocal text, from the poems within the main body to
the handwritten script that edges along the lower margins of each page,
sometimes as appearing as a kind of Greek chorus, and other times, entirely separate
from the action of the main text. Held as the final section of the collection, “River
Codex,” is sketched in reverse through the whole of the collection. In the “NOTES
ON THE POEMS” at the end of the collection, Brown explains: “Throughout, italicized lines are either
quotes, overheard, or should be sung. RIVER CODEX is designed to be read either
forwards or backwards, stanza by stanza, throughout the book.” The section
helps give the collection the appearance of a living document over a fixed
text, as a kind of working notebook.
IF I DON’T SHAKE YOUR HAND
OR HUG YOUR NECK
Just know I want
to,
Billy in the
low ground
This song has
an Extry Part
that I made a
little bit crooked
Ain’t no sunshine when she’s gone
This is a new
song
that sounds
like an old song.
That’s why we
like it.
You’re every song I ever heard
Sing for me my mockingbird
Usually we
start slow and taper off.
Thank you to
the folk up in Madison County
for welcoming
us in
Two big
reasons I can’t be Dolly Parton
I’m busted
So Bless your
hearts and other vital organs
What do we know of Madison County? Predominantly, what Brown tells us. Any geography can’t
help but be thick with its own language, dialect and references, and Brown’s project,
in many ways, is no different than Lisa Robertson writing out meteorological language
in The Weather (New Star Books, 2001)
or Michael Holmes exploring the patter of professional wrestling in Parts Unknown (Insomniac Press, 2004). Brown’s
is nearly a scrapbook of poems as signage, conversation, journal entry, letters
to friends, reminiscence, historical fact, observational note and the
occasional ballad, all wrapped up in an engaged, sustained and ongoing love for
the people and the place. As she writes to open “A LETTER OUT”:
So it’s one
of my first days writing here. I take off to the old turnpike and stop in at
the Ramsey cemetery. It reminds me of the one Linda took me to with a view of
the Flatirons where we searched for the unmarked grave of Edward Steele and
instead found a heart-shaped rock. A blue and grey vista of ridges fold around
my home. These mountains are old
mountains. Rockies: 5 million years old, Appalachians: 500 million.
The poem
ends:
I want to
meet you people but I am only on the first level time-wise. Even though it’s my
home state, I’m way out in the country now. There’s something in this impulse
that wants me to write it with light.
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