OPERETTA
Here buried an operetta
as our being together
brought out by chance
On a complicated dawn
chromatic values that enter
a room that is like a dream
The first recognizable patterns
were fingerprints
Difficulty of a foreign language
misplaced in a love for
Impossibility, construe a film
and so we began to chart
the body rowed away in haste
a science of resisting sleep.
Assigning each star
to a new constellation
The
author of Ozalid (1913 Press, 2010), Eirik’s Ocean (Yo-Yo Labs/Portable
Press, 2016), Ancient Guest
(HarperCollins, 2017) and MC3 (Essay
Press, 2018), the latest from poet, editor and publisher Biswamit Dwibedy is
the poetry title Hubble Gardener (New
York NY: Spuyten Duyvil, 2018), a collection of clipped lyric sketches awash in
sensation. His poems are dream-like, abstract enough to let the music of the
lyric carry a reader through. “As now you will / say: Can I? / Repeating / Let
Me. Be Mine. / And the Many / in the forest turn concrete.” he writes, in the
poem “After Noon.” Dwibedy’s poems are lyric, but one akin to jazz, allowing
images and lines to bounce and jolt off of each other, jumping down and across.
His poems as much invoke a sense of movement as they are constructed from that
same movement, set as a restless, engaged curiosity that sweeps across each
page. As he writes to open the poem “A.M.”: “walking in / —is / the noon today
/ a delay between / arrivals / & will not look / you in the eye / will not
touch / the skin [.]”
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