THE WINE-DARK
SEA
Memory draws back
dialing lips.
These unreal
reasons to write,
to say, straight true.
It is already a month
since I left
the hospital.
Like everything in letters
there is a little
& a ligature.
The
seventy-six poems that make up Denver, Colorado poet and editor Mathias Svalina’s
fifth poetry collection, The Wine-Dark Sea (Portland OR: Sidebrow Books, 2016), are each no longer than a page,
and hold the same title as the collection (which makes the table of contents, listing
every one of the seventy-six same-titled poems and their corresponding pages
absurdly entertaining). The poems in The
Wine-Dark Sea explore a rather dense and occasionally dark, surreal and
abstract lyric, one that is reminiscent at times of the work of Paris, Ontario poet Nelson Ball (or certain poems by Stuart Ross), for their density and
meditative tone. There is almost a zen quality in some of these pieces, as he writes:
“Each day emerges / in apprise. // No one / can be / companion— // the grass //
purely / containment.” There is something fantastic in the way Svalina composes
so many poems under the same title. One could argue it would be relatively easy
to compose one poem under such a title, or even a couple, but seventy-six poems
with similar tone and structure without lapsing into repetition or mediocrity is
simply stellar. It makes me curious to know if he composed more than he
required and cut down, or simply worked like hell on every single piece,
carving and cobbling lyric fragments together into these smart, well-crafted
and incredibly powerful poems. The
Wine-Dark Sea is sharp as hell, and a marvellous achievement.
THE
WINE-DARK SEA
Wet bodies
burst
in the sun.
I need new songs
to bite this lip off
to find the more
fragile lip.
I can only
canopy,
the song always on
the radio,
the radio
always on.
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