By BRETT WARNKE
WAKEFIELD—At a small gathering in Hera Gallery, this
reporter was fortunate to hear two local poets recite a few samples of their poetry. But why poetry? Let’s try an experiment: Tear off a piece of this newspaper and write
down as many advertising slogans as you can.
(Pause). Now that you have run
out of room and wasted the ink of two pens borrowed from your sassy waitress,
in a spirit of apology, recite for her three poems you memorized in the last
month. (No takers?) In here lies the dilemma of the poet. We are in a noisy and speedy world with
little time allotted for reflection. Yet
we can see that the world which sustains us is diminishing the numinous powers
of language. The poet, so ignored and
sidelined in American culture (though even Plato said they should be banished
from the city), describes the experience of being alive; she listens to our
stories and pithily puts the contours of existence into text.
The first poet, Mary
Mueller, was nominated for a Pushcart Prize for poetry by New Verse News. She read her poems in a steady, quiet
voice. Wearing a deep red scarf she
recited short poems such as “Minnesota,” about returning (emotionally and
perhaps physically) to her home in the Midwest.
In it, we are taken to a darkly familiar place with dead cornstalks
standing as “withered sentinels.” Then, as
if by an act of engulfing repression, clouds descend “blanketing the earth in
mist/anointing the soil/taking souls back.”
Other poems like “Dionysis in Pawtucket” had a sprightly mood with
Mueller’s characteristic lush imagery.
Mueller also read her poem, “Poetry Reading, The Towers, Narragansett”
which evoked the same anticipation and wonder from the Gallery reading:
We wait upon the
words/like night cats/alert to a twig’s snap/or a stirring of air/as it brushes
the ground like silk,/a geisha turning to bow/as she attends the hint of a
sigh. We wait upon the words/to tell us
a bedtime story/pure as a lullaby/and grim as the brothers’ tales/that send us
off to dream/in sweet awe of night terrors.
We wait upon the words /that make us smile/not knowing where mysterious
heat begins or ends/as we carry it from the tower/in a chalice white as a
spring orchid/to meet the ocean mist.
With a presence that
could not differ more radically from Mueller’s, Julie Hassett completed the
night’s reading. Hassett alternated
between chatty personal stories and poems about the emotional distance in her
own large Irish family, as well as divorce, self-discovery, privacy, and
motherhood. In one poem, “Crime Scene”
she writes of a friend with cancer: “Look/You twist your
head, display a necklace of tumors/just below your skin, insist that I witness/four
round knobs,/popping to the surface, my eyes stopped/by the shock of the thief/snaking
his way through your lung,/your lymph nodes, back for a second attack,/four
fingertips pressed to your throat/as we both choke.”
The last evening in the poetry
series is March 3 from 6-8 but a project next month will focus on artists
drawing about poetry and poets writing about art. You can access poetry by these writers at www.origamipoems.com and can discover
more about events at the gallery at www.heragallery.org/.
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