And the road was all
Of bones
And all and only I
Was on it
Walking to where at noon forever
A voice
Far and thinly
Filling up
The canyons the boxes
Of its meanings
I say was
What I mean is
Will be
Southern
California poet, translator and editor Chad Sweeney’s sixth full-length poetry
title LITTLE MILLION DOORS: AN ELEGY
(New York NY: Nightboat Books, 2019), a book-length lyric poem stripped down to
the bone. LITTLE MILLION DOORS: AN ELEGY
surrounds the death of the author’s father, and what follows, utilizing the
process of grief and writing as a way to potentially rebuild. The effect of
Sweeney’s lines are striking, composing phrases that end before they finish,
accumulating as a kind of staccato or lyric pointillism, one made out of
moments to cohere into something larger, but only once enough of the poem has
presented itself. As the book/poem writes, mid-volume: “What is it to live / Is
to want to live [.]”
What
becomes quite compelling is in how his individual lines connect to and
disconnect from each other, tethering meanings that ripple further, even break,
at the succeeding line. Meaning becomes, if not fluid, but something that
shimmers, concurrently in multiple, and even contradictory directions. There is
something radiant that emerges from his lines, from this poem, as it bobs and
weaves, continuing further down a path both casual and incredibly precise. LITTLE MILLION DOORS: AN ELEGY is a poem
grand in scale, composed to the smallest and most immediate moments of grief,
thinking and memory.
Into us a little while
Light lets nothing is
Sovereign a page a box
Brimming
All delicate
In the body held
In the coarse
Rope netting
Of the body time keeps
Branching what
Does it want in us each
Carries her
Death like a vase of deaths
Was I
Married in the soft sleep
Of marrow I can’t explain
Children see me
Inside them I watch
Language move the year
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