Winter
Range
The living consent to the living,
and the ability they share.
(The grain is scattered across the woodcuts—
is lying in one
direction—
is sanded from the harvest scenes.)
They are chasing the goats
to warm the milk;
they are thinning the pulp for tracing-paper;
and thinking of the places
they have left—the façade work,
of caches in sand,
rising in their
absence.
There
is an enormous amount of activity in St. Joseph, Minnesota poet Christopher Bolin’s first trade poetry collection, Ascension Theory (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 2013). Bolin plays the activities
on the immediate surface against the hidden depths, composing a poetry of rough
cut glass. His is a poetry that understands conceptual smallness, the open
narrative and the meditative leaps akin to the poetry of, say, San Diego poet Rae Armantrout. And, like Armantrout, and poets such as Cole Swensen, Suzanne Buffam and Ken Babstock, Bolin appears to exist within a space that appreciates
formal convention against formal invention, belonging to neither camp
specifically, but a foot firmly in both.
Ascension Theory writes of isolation,
connectiveness and the relation of disconnect. The characters that populate
Bolin’s poems are centred and adrift, wandered but not lost, and lost knowing
exactly where they are the whole time. As he writes to open the poem “Rites of
Spring,” “The fox-scented decoys going unfound in the wind: scattering / the
nesting fowl: catching their young // in the illusion;,” ending precisely in
the centre, writing: “for he will find you in the clearing, and you will be of
little burden.”
Procedure
Who stenciled “Little Boy”?
I want him
to make the incision.
“Her feeling her heart falling
is part
of the ascension.”
If left alone, now, the plaster-
baths
will strengthen themselves.
This
proves strength is not a virtue.
I prefer a taxidermist. Who else
dresses
so many forms with parts?
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