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Number 288
August/September 2001

Seeing Quick
RUSTY MORRISON
Copyright © 2001 Poetry Flash

FOR, poems by Carol Snow, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2000, 74 pages, $14.95 paper.
DEEPSTEP COME SHINING, poems by C.D. Wright, Copper Canyon Press, Port Townsend, Washington, 1998, 112 pages, $14. 00 paper.

Both For, Carol Snow's second collection of poems, and Deepstep Come Shining, C. D. Wright's eleventh, offer an unabashed plain-spokenness that examines life at its most supple and protean. For these poets, the real drops any stilted mask of '-ism' and stands before us suffused in the blush of its naked and mercurial strangeness. Neither poet needs to embellish the obvious, gilding immediacy with orphic high notes to garner our attention. Instead, each in her own fashion uses surprisingly direct language to signify the unbounded potential simply present in our perceptual field.

Lyn Hejinian, in her essay "Strangeness," describes the ways that seventeenth and eighteenth century explorers "sought to discover the tangibility and singular distinctness of the world's exuberant details" through "a respect for particularity." She explains that the strangeness which "results from a description of the world given in the terms 'there it is', 'there it is', 'there it is', restores realness to things in the world and separates things from ideology." Wright and Snow are such explorers---but ones who attend not only to their observations, but also to the effects that the act of observation will have upon their interior as well as exterior, and their metaphysical as well as physical, landscape.

Those familiar with Snow's first book, Artist and Model, know already the acuity with which Snow observes perception's influences upon the seen, as well as upon the seer, The interdependent relationship between the visual artist and the world to be observed, absorbed, and represented---which reflects that of the writer with her material---is a primary focus of that collection. This focus returns in For, albeit more subtly, with Snow's examination of mind's creative recasting of the images it construes as world. Snow uses not only a keenly honed diction as filter for accruing the fine colorations of these studies, but also, in painterly fashion, she takes advantage of the visual potential of the page--- adapting collage, repetition, juxtaposition, and spacial arrangement to depict her exploration of the ramifications in any act of rendering.

Such formal decisions show Snow's affinities with Denise Levertov, who, in a description of organic form, proposes that "a constellation of perceptions... [is] felt by the poet intensely enough to demand of him [sic] their equivalence in words." Such intensity imbues Snow's craft, though Snow's forms register not only this poet's assiduous attention to the demands of her constellating perceptions, but also her implicit questioning of whether it is in fact possible to achieve their equivalence in language. I should also note that Snow's attention to perception doesn't ignore the post-structuralist disavowal of the notion of a unified speaker. Like Rae Armatrout, Snow exposes a plenitude of competing sources that constitute the volatile flux one might label as identity. Both poets demonstrate how language constructs a complex, many layered subjectivity.

Here, in the poem that bears the collection's title, the speaker attempts to locate a sudden glimpse of self in the rustling camouflage of selves. Notice that Snow's use of lineation and spacing suggests the feel of thought, its torsions and floods, offering a spacial apperception of the movement in time of a series of thoughts.

To begin, even in the---even with the---
disarray...

An assortment of stones; sand, framed--- the "Miniature Zen Garden" a gift
from my brother---

or even
to be---the difficulty...

(then: "The difficulty to think at the end of day"; but what had
reminded me, already, of Stevens? of "A Rabbit as King of the
Ghosts"? I dreamt of my mother once as a rabbit---funny---
but it's my father, clearly: "King" and "of Ghosts," becoming 'a
shadow of his former self'---)

to be---

(that's what it was: "To be, in the grass, in the peacefullest time";
confusion
rallies to my defence "at the end of day" ---10/23/90)

stones--- of the gift of the garden: "to arrange"---any-which-way on the sand,
the little rake set by.

(page 64)

Mei-mei Berssenbrugge also could be called a kindred spirit to Snow. The density of Berssenbrugge's text on the page may not seem sisterly to Snow's more open arrangements, but both poets are talented excavators of subjectivity through their use of long sentences---both are able to divulge semantically each ideational layer within layer, and to expertly follow syntax through perceptions, even those in the midst of violent tectonic shift. Snow manages this complexity by training her brackets, parentheses, slash marks, and dashes to perform their duties at peak potential. And, her spacing of language on the page affords just the right dramatic highlight for her punctuation's athleticisms. Here is an excerpt from "Measure":

Ecstasy has its subject/object confusions: for instance,
your hand reaching for the line is the line

approaching (distance---
closing to the grasped clothespin---[a dancer]
partnering);…

(page 44)

This whimsical, but still heartfelt, willingness to follow even a hair's-width shift of perception---and to listen in for all of mind's marginalia---has become a trademark of Snow's craft. In For, she continues this focus on the incessant nature of mind to constantly refocus, but with particular attention to the effects of positioning. So it is fitting that a poem titled "Positions of the Body VI," which is the last section of a poem sequence in Artist and Model, returns in the early pages of For. It includes this telling evaluation: "Cézanne, leaning to his canvas, would have mastered / that view, you thought..." Rather than position herself in a similar stance of power over the object of perception, Snow demonstrates in poem after poem the fluidity with which she subverts the idea of 'masterfully' observing whatever is 'under' scrutiny. By seeing into, as well as beyond, the binary relationship suggested by such 'author'-ity, she is able to engage with the more subtle interrelationships between observer and observed.

Snow's attention to positioning also yields intriguing studies of the ways we position ourselves socially and psychologically: "and between them / a closeness I'd (somehow) steal into..." (from "Position Paper"). She is adept at exposing the complex expectations that underlie such positioning---be it involving lovers, friends, family members. Here is an excerpt from "Dear," one of many poems attempting to assay the shifting relations between the speaker and her father. In this poem, we have come to understand that the speaker's father is living in a special care facility because of an accident that has left his ability to communicate, and to understand communication, severely impaired.

We can talk a little, okay? But only a little---a skimming
a surface. Under a bridge but over the reflection of the bridge
in that painting you so admired---one of the pair, Dutch (you owned).
(So much
in our shared look: wit, elation, intimacy---that you recognized me?; I
resembled ... )
How you liked the Impressionists, too---their reflection, refraction,
more difficult---( not to say 'loved'). (I thought to belong in that look
forever ... ) Though your Boudin turned out to be forged---a poor
investment---not even a copy,
since the original of that painting never existed...

(page 32)

Here we see many examples of Snow's virtuosity: the fluid shift from metaphor ("a skimming / a surface") to detail of memory ("Under a bridge but over the reflection of the bridge / in that painting"); the attention to 'ownership' and 'originality' in art, which underscore the poet's interrogation of these ideas with respect to memory, familial love, identity; and the elegance with which past and present 'reflect', 'refract', "impressionist[ically]." All these demonstrate how fastidiously Snow furnishes an instance of awareness, inviting the reader to enter thought as habitable space.

With such a discerning focus upon focus, appreciative of life's illuminating paradoxes, Snow examines not only the supple and shifting minds within mind, but also the inattentions within attention.

Years of therapy and beginning to notice my habit of switching off the
lights, setting a cup down, putting up the knife
in an area behind me---starting away (not witnessing---blameless), an
arm stretching back---

fumbling, often; having to go back and begin again but already
departing...

(from "Helpless, behind Her," page 28)

Snow isolates in the simplest of daily experiences the many shifting surfaces that cohere as one's apprehension of the real. Such skill makes her an especially astute observer of the fluctuating ground one experiences in more highly charged life situations. In fact, some of the most compelling poems in this collection traverse the volatile terrain one enters after the death of a parent. But in examining even such wrenching experiences, Snow avoids resorting to the kind of desultory elaboration of suffering that, in a lesser poet's hands, might have swamped her material. Instead, with the quickness of the title's adverb---which is already moving toward all that is sayable, and unsayable, as answer to Why?---Snow illuminates, instant by instant, the changing actualities of experience that living is frighteningly, fiercely rich with, that living is For.

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Quickness certainly should also be enlisted to describe C. D. Wright's poetic virtuosity. And, as Italo Calvino explains in Six Memos for the Next Millennium, quickness is essential in furthering "the function of literature," which he sees as the "communication between things that are different simply because they are different, not blunting but even sharpening the differences between them." Such authorial skill Calvino believes is especially needed in our time, "when other fantastically speedy, widespread media are triumphing, and running the risk of flattening all communication into a single homogeneous surface."

Wright has long been a poet who, like Snow, eschews presenting a "single homogeneous surface," choosing instead to use a variety of formal strategies to show the most surprising "communication between things that are different." In Deepstep Come Shining, surface breathes more porous web than dense weave: "I always did have a spidery hand," (page 81). It is Wright's quickness that teaches us to balance as we leap from thread to thread. Each is held tautly in place by the canny accuracy of her language, and vibrates with a music that is both eerie and eerily true to life: both dispossessed of expected normalcy and resonant with a strange familiarity. Enjoying Wright's excellent ear for plain-spoken vernacular, one is caught off-guard by the strange ghostings of possibilities flawlessly integrated in the daily; the sense of otherness is always within arm's reach.

If I shell those beans for you, will you cook a mess for me. There
goes Hannah behind that cloudlet.

(page 50)

Or:

Saucer of light on the wall
the hand of god

(page 51)

Surprising too are Wright's ingenious instances of language play. There are her quirky asides, which often illuminate just how many hidden assumptions we carry into speech: "Which is brighter g-r-a-y or g-r-e-y. Which is pitched higher," (page 77). And there are many sly syntactic constructions, such as "Morning glories," (page 27), which demonstrate that words lodge as nouns, adjectives, verbs, in only itinerant fashion, and might leave behind such limits as easily as our speaker travels on down the road past "Cloud's Fly Shop," (page 38).

Wright begins Deepstep Come Shining with lines from Shakespeare:

LEAR: ...you see how this world goes.
GLOUCESTER: I see it feelingly.

The synesthesia of seeing "feelingly" is a helpful heuristic for traveling Wright's book-length poem, which is loosely structured as a road trip through the south: "O lucky stars. / Motel 6 left its light on for us. Remember you are nothing / without credit," (page 13), but is also as chock full of arcana as a country almanac or a swamp doctor's book of lore: "Odontokeratoprosthesis: a tooth for an eye. A gruesome procedure, / but not a bad trade," (page 49). Wright's odyssey is as much epistemological exploration as it is physical traverse through the myriad competing, often contradictory perceptual stimuli that become our sum of experience, our way of knowing world, and ourselves in it. Like Snow, Wright salts the life-stew with an infectious humor, appreciating the tedious as well as the terrible, as she stirs up the struggle to understand who, what, sometimes even where we are: "If Louise is the answer what is the question. Are we stuck here / or what. Anyway, the singing's not helping much," (page 100). Though Wright's delivery is more deadpan ironic than Snow's, both poets find enormous value and pleasure in keen observation.

"Never avert your eyes," Wright cautions, quoting Kurasawa (pages 3, 42). And she doesn't, taking, as she calls them, "Stimulants, Poultices, Goads" (page 109) from sources as diverse as Sir Isaac Newton and the Lumiere Brothers. Like Snow, Wright's strength is in demonstrating how such open-eyed inclusion leads not to confusion or diffusion, but to an ever more discerning awareness of the potential magnitude perceivable in each moment at hand.

Such a position is very much in keeping with Wright's desire to allow language to open possibilities, rather than limit them. As she explains in "69 Hidebound Opinions, Propositions, and Several Asides from a Manila Folder Concerning the Stuff of Poetry": "Never deprive the reader of opportunities for multiple exegeses." Lyn Hejinian might well have been describing Wright's poetics in saying that "[d]escription should not be confused with definition; it is... highly intentional while at the same time ideally simultaneous with and equivalent to perception (and thus open to the arbitrariness, unpredictability, and inadvertence of what appears)" (from "Strangeness"). In Deepstep Come Shining, Wright gives us ample opportunities to find surprising glimpses of understanding from the "arbitrariness, unpredictability, and inadvertence of what appears." Her sometimes shocking, sometimes hilarious images are presented for viewing in a swift succession radically free from the confines of preconceived notions regarding sequence or order.

Open the window. That the glory cloud may come and go.

Inside the iris of time, the iridescent dreaming kicks in. Turn off
that stupid damn machine.

Kepler's invention of the camera lucida fell into oblivion some
two hundred years. There is no avoiding oblivion.

Where does this damn stupid thing go. For god's sake. Are you
sure you want to wear that.

(page 10)

Even while such paratactics shock, disrupting reader expectations, Wright's tone offers a remarkable down-home ease and affability. Wright's voice carries us, and we soon find that many of the displaced and displacing images, aphorisms, snatches of narrative and lore begin to overlap and congeal in intriguing patterns---but they are patterns that adhere outside the bounds of typical systems of logic and sense. Their often captivating coherencies may in fact be opening our intuition to methods of gathering or acquiring knowledge that are quite different from those with which we're most familiar.

Besides paratactic jump cuts, imagistic leaps and starts, and narrative which bubbles and pops, Wright also disrupts expectations by varying margins, punctuation, lineation strategies, even font size, so that our road trip's physical nature is often shifting. We ride through in the way that one passes from hill country into the flats, from green country to dry, knowing where we are only by attending to our senses---as Gloucester proposed, "feelingly." Here, for instance, Wright shifts margins, lineation and punctuation strategies, as well as time and location, context and emphasis. But what remains consistent is Wright's tone of bemused appreciation for the invaluable opportunity that life grants us: to be present for whatever comes next into view.

We see a little farther now and a little farther still

She said her lights would be on and they were

Groping around the sleeping house in our gowns

Peeping into the unseen

Beautiful things fill every vacancy

Ripcord Lounge is up on the right. 32° beer. A little past the
package store. Suddenly I have the feeling of a great victory.
A delirious brilliance.

All around in here it used to be so pretty.

The boneman's bobcat. Its untamable eyes in the night. Did you
know a ghost has hair. A ghost has hair. That's right.

Peaches and fireworks and red ants.
Now do you know where you are.

(pages 7--8)

Without explanation, Wright shifts effortlessly into surprising instances of local lore, such as "A ghost has hair. That's right," or "Whatever the swamp / doctor says. Comply," (page 19), or "The boneman hung up a sheet, slashed it, and ordered the / blinded one stick his arm through, then he stuck thorns in their / sightless arm," (page 28). By presenting such folk wisdom in its vernacular, without explanation or apology, Wright exposes its grace, the seductive charm of its mystery. Expressed too is the power of any community's massive accumulation of knowledge and beliefs---how such information is so difficult for its members to question---even as such positioning in Wright's text leaves these snatches of lore without the protection of familiar contexts. Wright is enough of an 'insider' in the southern landscape to overhear its deepest secrets, and enough of an 'outsider' to know the shock value, as well as the strange beauty, each bit of lore holds when cast adrift from the act of kindred meanings and values which usually keep it safe from scrutiny.

As with Snow, one can see in the movement of Wright's text a deep respect for Charles Olson's pronouncement to

keep moving, the nerves, their speed, the perceptions, …the split second acts...
USE USE USE the process at all points... always one perception must must must
MOVE INSTANTER, ON ANOTHER.

Wright's isn't afraid to make such "move[s]," even if it means leaping the 'lockstep' of logical coherence so as to "…Deepstep now baby deepstep. Bear me along your / light-bearing paths. Come shining," (page 49). Hers is a poetics of "split second acts," which "use[s] the process at all points" to engage the reader to move with her, "instanter, on another"---so that the process itself, expressed in the form of the poem, becomes one of the many "deepsteps" Wright takes for, and with, us. In both subject matter and form, this poet demonstrates that to risk 'stepping' out of the familiar is necessary if we are to 'deepen' our awareness of that ever shifting region which is being, and if we are to claim any true understanding of that region as our own---even as she calls into question, in Barthes-ian fashion, any such ownership: "Stay here with me. If you don't mind the dark. We can talk until / the tape runs out. It has the aura of an original," (page 99). For both Snow and Wright, all such "talk"---be it interior or exterior---which we use to construct and constrain our understanding, is exactly what must be seen, and seen through. Yet neither poet expects such sight will ever be complete, nor that such steps taken into the unknown will ever be finished. Both simply offer the joy that comes in appreciating the stumbling as much as the sight, demonstrating that attending to the act of attention itself is endlessly rewarding. As Wright puts it:

... O world world world
I but stumbled when I saw praise is the gate
to enter plenty of parking come early
to get a good seat

(page 102)

Rusty Morrison is an M.F.A. graduate of the Creative Writing Program at Saint Mary's College, Moraga, California. A contributing editor to Poetry Flash, her poems and other writings have appeared or are forthcoming in Nimrod, Fourteen Hills, VOLT, First Intensity, Untitled (a magazine of prose poetry), ZYZZYVA.

 

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