Donald Maier, "Study in White Enamel" |
The Work of the Poet
The work of the poet
is to name what is
holy:
the spring snow
that hides unevenness
but also records
a dog walked at
lunchtime,
the hieroglyphs of
birds,
pawprints of a life
tiny but resolute;
how, like Russian
dolls,
we nest in previous
selves;
the lustrous itch
that compels an
oyster
to forge a pearl,
or a poet a verse;
the drawing on of
evening
belted at the waist;
snowfields of diamond
dust;
the cozy monotony
of our days, in which
love appears with a
holler;
the way a man's body
has its own geography
-
cliffs, aqueducts,
pumice fields,
but a woman's is the
jungle,
hot, steamy, full of
song;
the brain's curiosity
shop
filled with quaint
mementos
and shadow antiques
hidden away in
drawers;
the plain geometry
of you, me, and art -
our angles at rest
among shifting forms.
The work of the poet
is to name what is
holy,
and not to mind so
much
the pinch of words
to cope with memories
weak as falling
buildings,
or render loss, love,
and the penitentiary
of worry where we
live.
The work of the poet
is to name what is
holy,
a task fit for
eternity,
or the small Eden of
this hour.
Diane Ackerman
Another
poem about poetry (like Pablo Neruda's "Poetry"of January 3). Neruda says
Poetry summoned him and he had to figure out how to say what wanted to be said.
Ackerman here explains what the work is about. She sums it up flatly at first, as if she were filling out a government form, but then can't
help herself, and makes a list of examples, throws in a whole lot of metaphors
and adjectives with a nice little universal and finishes up with a reference to
Eden. I sure
hope she put that on her tax form. "To name what is
holy". Of course that means everything. And it's not that naming it makes
it holy, it was always so. The holiness of everyday things. (Elizabeth
Barrett Browning wrote, "Earth's crammed with heaven/And every common bush
afire with God/But only he who sees takes off his shoes"... Remember
Neruda "deciphering that fire"? There's a theme here.) Maybe that's
another way to describe a poet - one who sees. If that's true, on some level we
are all poets. If we look around and inside ourselves, we have to acknowledge
that we are more than the sum of our parts, that there is an underlying truth
that ties all things and times and places together, that there are patterns
embedded and encrusted and emblazoned within all things. That phrase “deep
calls to deep” comes to mind – it’s hard to explain, but what I think Ackerman
on some level is saying is that there are depths beyond the surface, and these speak,
and call to each other of beauty and love and fullness. To me, that’s God. And, yes,
Eden. The place where we were not divided from each other. The time before we got lost ("Lost", David Wagoner, my last post).
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