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A Poetic Blind Tasting
UW poet delves into history
The Seconds
By Linda Bierds
G. P. Putnam's Sons
2001, 88 pages
Paperback, $15
Reviewed by Kent Chadwick
Are Linda Bierds' poems zircon or diamond, costume jewelry or true
pearls? That was the doubt I'd had since first hearing and reading
Bierds' poems nearly a decade ago. That was a doubt fostered by dozens
of bad poems by other poets who namedrop historical figures into their
titles in order to add meaning to their lyrics. How much of the
attraction of Bierds' poems was intrinsic and how much due to their
historical settings?
Bierds, a professor of creative writing at the University of
Washington and a MacArthur Foundation genius grant recipient,
regularly identifies historical subjects and settings in her titles.
"From the Orchard: Marie Curie, 1930" is a typical example. So the day
that I bought my copy of Bierds' new book, The Seconds, I covered its
table of contents without reading it and masked the title line of each
poem with a scrap of paper and scotch tape. Then I was ready to read
each poem without a historical preconception and perform the poetic
equivalent of a blind tasting.
My first taste, the first poem, was one of the longest in the
collection, running five pages. Written in the first person, the
speaker is royalty struggling with both madness and insomnia in a time
of quills, caravels, and castratos. With exacting attention to detail
and the wanderings of consciousness, Bierds builds a sequence of six
rich scenes connected by lightly handled symbols:
"Time tossed and retrieved her shadow, again
and again, out over Polaris and a distant Mars...."
When read without knowing the title, it is a very good poem,
interesting and satisfying in its own right. Then I uncovered the
poem's title: "Dementia Translucida: Philip V of Spain, 1740." The
title serves to anchor the poem into history, naming the speaker and
his condition, yet the poem isn't dependent on the title. The worth of
the poem is earned, not borrowed from a historical setting.
But I think that Bierds obliges us too much by specifying the exact
date in this title. She expects no background or work from the reader.
I knew nothing of Philip V, would only have been able to place him
within a range of three hundred years, yet I didn't need to know the
exact year of its setting in order to enjoy the poem. Bierds gives us
history. But I think a more powerful approach is to drive readers to
history, as Ezra Pound did in his Cantos, which almost requires the
reader to become a student of history in order to understand its
poems.
In my "blind tasting" of The Seconds, I found that nearly two-thirds
of Bierds' poems are similarly strong, interesting in image and
language, with their historical references serving to anchor them in
time and multiply their dimensions. A prime example from this group is
"The Highland: Zelda Fitzgerald, 1939," a beautiful meditation on
language, illness, and consciousness as Zelda writes to her "Dear
One," F. Scott I expect, from an elegant mental hospital. Bierds
effectively describes Zelda's experience of her mental illness, how
her visual perception occasionally fractures, making the things around
her shift from objects into masses of color and free-floating lines.
"Into what shape will our shapelessness flow?" Zelda asks, in doubt of
her immediate stability and her future. This is not an everywoman
abandoned into mental illness; it's Zelda Fitzgerald. Knowing the
historical circumstances adds poignancy and gives us a slot in which
to file the images and the narrative, yet reduces the range of the
reader's possible engagement with the poem. It is a known story, not a
fiction, an imaginative drilling into the historically real, not an
open-ended invention.
However, some of Bierds' poems in The Seconds do need their historical
setting to rise above the average. For example, I didn't find "The
Ponds: Franz Kafka, June 1924" interesting until I uncovered the
title. The actual lines of the poem don't effectively create a
portrait of the speaker, nor do they lead us to care much about his
fate. The poem first describes the speaker's childhood swims with his
father, then jumps to a story about his grandfather's winter baths in
an ice-covered river, then precipitously to the fact that the
speaker's larynx is now diseased and he's traveling to find a cure.
The only thing holding the pieces of this poem together and attracting
our attention is the fact given in the title- that the speaker is
Franz Kafka.
Taken as a whole, The Seconds is more effective than it's individual
parts. The individual poems are well-crafted and intriguing, but not
often great. A difficult poem may need a number of readings for one to
fully grasp its allusions and indirections, and only a few in the
collection promise individually to draw me back again in the future.
But together they form a very satisfying and very smart meditation on
illness and the experience of time. Here in her sixth volume of
poetry, Bierds has perfected the building of a book. Her lyric voice
unifies a wide range of biographies and carefully weaves images and
oddities into a major theme--how illness often draws us into a
penetrating awareness of the things around us, how that awareness
slows our experience of time and ushers us into the presence of death:
"the sun is pale,
the heavens troubled ...
I tremble before my own heart."
That's knowledge I'll return to.
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