Tuesday, September 22, 2020

The Garden of Verse: The Gifts of September

 

            The gifts of September's Verse-Virtual, the online journal that publishes scores of new poems every month, keep calling, showing me new wonders each time I unwrap them. Here are a few of the poems I keep going back to.

            Betsy Mars's beautifully phrased praise-poem to canine virtues, "What Is Essential," kept me re-reading to appreciate fully these essentials:

"you know

language is the source of misunderstandings",

            Instead, as the poem details the essentials of the dog's understanding:

"You understand the necessity

of keeping the baobabs at bay

and raking out the volcanos –

even the ones that might be extinct.

You dig out roots in the yard

and rake the carpet into submission."

            The poem goes on from here to detail the sublimely wordless understanding between person and dog. How can we fail to appreciate a pet that holds trees at bay and keeps carpets from pulling a fast one?

 

I was drawn into Sean Kelbley's poem "Explanation" right from the beginning when the speaker's "Oma" explains where her home was.

"Batschka,

Oma said, and ran her palms across her face

as if to smooth a map. At the center of the map,

her eyes burned like specific villages."

            Those two similes, one for the old woman's gesture --"as if to smooth a map" -- and the second, for her eyes -- "burned like specific villages" -- tell us that the road to an 'explanation' is not going to be all sweetness and light. 

 

September includes two beautifully haunting poems by Jeff Burt. While "Snowflakes" finds reasons for 'angels' everywhere, the poem titled "Flash" intrigues and moves us with explanations for a mysterious light phenomenon:

"Once I thought it was the acrylic panel on my luggage

reflecting the nose light of an airliner about to crash.

Once I thought it was a beacon calling me

to read Hafiz on indulging joy

when knowing God surprises us

by awkward revelations when we least expect them."

            The poem convinces me that 'revelations'  are likely to be awkward. I'll stop complaining about the noise in the street now. Maybe it's trying to tell me something.

 

So many of the wonder creatures in September's poems are dogs; a few are angels. The subjects of Irving Feldman's poem “Of, course we would wish“ are compared to angels at one point, but they're really not. They are, as the poet's note tells us," artist George Segal’s plaster casts" viewed at an exhibition. We'd like these plaster casts to appear e 'angelic,' the poem knowingly explains, tells us, but in fact "it's the dead themselves they resemble,..."

            This terrible resemblance is so beautifully expressed that we can't pull ourselves away:

"It hurts to see them so decent and poor.

And it does no good to scold them for it,

to shout at these newly impoverished relations

crowding timidly in the narrow hallway,

or recall to them the old extravagance,

or tempt them back with favorite morsels

and the glowing tales that made the hearth warmer."

            This poem doesn't simply describe a work of art. It gets inside it (and us too.).

 

 

Marjorie Moorhead's  "Catching My Eye" begins with these carefully laid out lines, like clues to a mystery:

"Imagine a church pew lady’s glove.

White lacy upturned palm,

cupping bees and butterflies,

swaying gently on long stem,

leaves like feathers of a green bird.

Many tiny blossoms together

in a circle-burst of celebration

decorating hot July fields,..."

             At this point I'm betting "Queen Anne's Lace." That turns out to be just one of the contenders in this poem's name game. But all the names and the all imagery the poem offers to make the inward eyes envision this summer marvel are equally winners:

            Call it summer time, the poem tells us:

"Heat waving

off pavement. Fields buzzing alive."

            I do call it summer time. And this poem nails it.

 

William Greenway's two intensely realized personal history poems got inside me as well. "Last Rites: Shark Week" alludes with a dark irony to an invitation to the rite of Communion. Of course the poem's darkly ironic invitation , as revealed in the poem's richly language, is offered by a shark:

"[I] never dreamed

back then how quickly things unseen

could rise from down below,

and how you could hear

not get out, now, but

Happy are those who are called

to his supper."

            It's a poem well worth rereading in its entirety. Something of the same tone is captured by a second poem, "Spooky Nook Road," that looks forward to the "scabrous scarecrows" and "headless horsemen" of that celebrated autumn holiday.

            I don't celebrate the end of summer. I miss it. But September 2020 shows us how much we have to look forward to.

            You can find all these poems here: 

Verse-Virtual September 2020 

 


 

 

 

 

 

Friday, September 4, 2020

Poems of Love, Sorrow, Remembrance and Earth's Enduring Beauty in September's Verse-Virtual


The September 2020 issue of Verse-Virtual, the online journal with a full bloom of new poems every month, takes us many places.  

Alan Walowitz, the issue's guest editor, recalls being “short-armed" by the local cop known as “Old Trench Coat” and ethnically profiled into a police line-up. The blues were looking for a guy who was "out jacking radios on Jewel" and who, we learn, looks Jewish. It's fall, the poem tells us, and

the light drops early
the way it does
this time of year in Queens

As it does throughout the Northeast, even in New England's Berkshire hills, where I'm writing this. But the light -- strong, indifferent, ascending, declining -- is always part of the picture, and I'm happy the poem, "Hardboiled," shows it to us here 

Verse-Virtual editor Jim Lewis recommends Steve Klepetar’s poem “Forgiving Hands,” a dreamy folk tale or parable, with a hint of magic realism. After drinking too much wine to take an older person to the hospital, the poem's "we" awake guiltily and discover that the older person up and cooking pasta. "every one of us was still alive," the poem tells us, then adds, perhaps chillingly, "or so we thought..." Read the rest in September 2020.

Jim Lewis also recommends Tamara Madison’s "The Nicest Man," a poem about a father’s surprising late-in-life discovery of a PBS role model. 

You can also find Lewis's own parable of our own pandemic times, "tell me why, tell me where," a tightly told tale of mask-wearing in a correctional setting. 

And three poems about an initial visit to Israel by Donna Hilbert, who says, “I miss the adventure of being in a country for the first time.” Altogether, the September issue features original work by 57 poets, a whale of a poetic haul. 


Finally, as you will not be surprised to learn, the issue includes three of my poems. 

I'll post below my own nostalgic ode to the swiftly passing season, "The Truth About 'Summer,'" a time of year I love and hope will linger in its best mellow, late-season fashion. I wrote this poem while listening to the instrumental song titled "Summer," written by Peter Kater.  



The Truth About 'Summer'*

Your gentle flutes, 
oh, too gentle for what we know of you
here on earth beneath your scorching eye 
How the wind blows! the rain lashes! 
We beg for your peace, implore the god of Weather,
that unending scroll of profane Revelations,
for the mercy of your milder face  
not only for mariners naked in the vulnerability 
of all who cannot walk on water,
 
but those who live by sewing life 
into the earth, and pray for rain, 
     but not too much,
who feed grass to beasts, dread bugs, pick infested leaves
off tomato plants,
Sing "Glory in the Morning" to Morning Glories 
Escape the heat in river sloughs,
Hunger for shorelines, 
for shallows lacking all creatures 
    that sting or bite,
Secure their harvests, their orchards, their vines, 
their trees with paper spells
     purchased from witch doctors 
 
Inspect their animals for signs of plague 
Protect their children from signs of plague 
Lift their prayers to the skies, 
stuff raspberries into the freezer 
when the growing is good
and fill all the world's vases, old wine bottles, occasional canteens, 
     and other vessels 
with the severed stems of beautiful things 
that cannot in the nature of things — 
     in the Nature of anything —
endure 
 
But listen! Listen to this fluted voice
of the praise singer,
Think of red fruit, and the dried and frozen sustenance of 
     winters, all those other days, 
those other seasons, 
when the sweetest song — song of fluted praise... 
floats immaculately away
 
*After Peter Kater's "Summer," in a version heard on Spotify  
08.05.20