After we touch
down, next morning, we
get October
sunburns in Transmitter
Park, pregnant
hipsters tanning
elastic
rounds. The East
River Ferry goes both
ways, graffiti
accuses: YOU WOULD.
First
our child was a
raspberry,
then a prune, a peach,
a fist, now
I fear the metaphors
have stopped. Little
plural
urchin. Karaoke October
I couldn’t
help bassing out
on Love
Will Tear Us Apart. (“Hunger”)
In
his third full-length poetry collection, The Falling Down Dance (Coffee House Press, 2015), Minneapolis poet Chris Martin [see his “12 or 20 questions” interview here] explores fatherhood
through meditative stretches that wander across a series of lyric specifics set
within a longer, abstract flow. Following his first two collections—American Music (Copper Canyon, 2007) and
Becoming Weather (Coffee House Press,
2011)—the poems in The Falling Down Dance
occasionally read as wistful, composed as thoughtful and inquisitive takes on
fatherhood, mortality, marriage, partnership and the intimate moments of
watching your first child emerge, and evolve from baby into toddler. These are
poems as rough sketches filled with curiosity, confusion and (an entirely
normal) parental fear, as he writes to open the poem “Time”: “What / if these
were / notes not / for something more / finished, but for something more / like
ruins, not Gothic / Revival Horace / Walpole fakes, not stonewashed / jeans,
but real ruins, lived-in almost / to death [.]” In an “Author Statement”
included with the press release, he writes:
If The Falling Down Dance is more personal, more domestic, and more
direct than any of my previous work, it is no less concerned with how
strangers, friends, and family permeate our experience of the world, or, in the
case of parenthood, begin largely to co-determine what that experience will be.
The pressures of anticipation, confusion, and cognitive development create an
experimental matrix where the time we share can be stretched, dilated,
squeezed, and collapsed. It is a book about survival, about failure, and about
what happens when we place the care of another human being at the center of our
lives.
Throughout
the collection, there are multiple poems titled “Time,” each of which holds a
fine line between the long stretch of a moment, and how hours might simply
disappear. “Snow is the conversation / winter makes with itself. No / quarrel,
just endless / pretty tedium, blank / babble, the baby / making his thizz face
/ with a fistful / of white melting against / his quartet of teeth.” The book
is thick with wonderfully-intimate details on pregnancy, birth and babies that
you might only really comprehend if you’ve lived through the experience (such
as the confusing fruit descriptions in the poem quoted above, a way that
fetuses are described in some apps; such as knowing that in week twenty, your
baby is roughly the size of a banana). I’ve been curious about the increase of
poems on fatherhood over the past few years, including recent works by Jason Christie and Farid Matuk, for example (some of which I wrote about in my own four-part essay on fatherhood for Open Book: Ontario soon after our Rose was born in 2013), opening up a long
overdue conversation on domestic/caregiving gender roles. Further in his “Author
Statement,” Martin makes a curious turn, suggesting the difficulties, still,
inherent in men being caregivers to their children, let alone possibly speaking
or writing on such:
The
Falling Down Dance is poised to join the burgeoning conversation
about fatherhood and masculinity. What does it mean for a father to take equal
responsibility for the care of a child? What does it mean for a man to face the
difficulties inherent in caring for a child, to shirk the self-possession by
which we recognize masculinity and let himself instead be possessed by a frail,
helpless, suffering being? How does a man speak about the constant and
necessary failure that accompanies the lessons of fatherhood, of parenthood,
the labor in simply trying to be competent? In portraying both the boy and
despair inherent in early parenthood, The
Falling Down Dance gives every parent a new, lyrical window into that most
treasured, ephemeral experience. We need poems like these to tell us how we
felt, especially in those early days when being too alive obliterates and bends time, when memory can’t accommodate
the onrush and overflow of feeling. We need these poems to recall for us what
we learned, what we lost, and to remind us how the falling that is inextricable from falling in love can make us more compassionate, more impassioned,
more human.
Given
that men have been able to write poems about the domestic for years (from
Robert Creeley to Phil Hall to Barry McKinnon, among so many others), the
difficulties Martin suggests perhaps say as much about his thoughts on such as
it might the climate (but I can’t, obviously, speak to his experience). There
are more male poets writing on parenting now than there ever have been,
certainly, and the idea of such conflicting with maleness, however present it
may or may not be, would be an intriguing conversation on its own. Martin’s
efforts have shown (one hopes, to himself, as well) that such is far more
possible than he ever could have imagined.
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