Source of book: Borrowed from the library
One of those random books out on display that I grabbed. Kay Ryan was Poet Laureate from 2008 to 2010, and won a MacArthur Grant and a Pulitzer. The book I found is an anthology, but, as I usually do, I selected a single collection and went with that. In this case, I chose Flamingo Watching from 1994.
Ryan was also the first openly lesbian US poet laureate.
I found the poems to be intriguing, and often creative and witty. They are short, and compressed. I didn’t always feel like they were the most musical, but engaged more at the level of a puzzle to be solved than music. This isn’t a criticism - poetry comes in many forms, and meaning is never limited to the form or feel.
The strength of Ryan’s writing is the quirky internal rhymes, the unexpected metaphor, and the wry wit that often takes a second or third reading to appreciate.
I did find a number that I liked.
This Life
It’s a pickle, this life.
Even shut down to a trickle
it carries every kind of particle
that causes strife on a grander scale:
to be miniature is to be swallowed
by a miniature whale. Zeno knew
the law that we know: no matter
how carefully diminished, a race
can only be half finished with success:
then comes the endless halving of the rest -
the ribbon’s stalled approach, the helpless
red-faced urgings of the coach.
A bit too much truth there, perhaps. We strive, yet we never arrive. Hey, that’s an internal rhyme too…
Every Painting by Chagall
Every twined groom and bride,
every air fish, smudged Russian,
red horse, yellow chicken, assumes
its position not actually beside
but in some friendly distribution
with a predictable companion.
Every canvas insists on a
similar looseness, each neck
put to at least two uses. And wings
from some bottomless wing source.
They are pleasure wings of course
since any horse or violinist
may mount the blue
simply by wanting to.
(In freedom, dear things
repeat without tedium.)
I do like Chagall, at a visceral level - and this is one of the best distillations of how his paintings often work. And also why we remain fascinated by Chagall.
This next one is related, and also, in my opinion, one of the deepest poems in this collection.
Leaving Spaces
It takes a courageous
person to leave spaces
empty. Certainly any
artist in the Middle Ages
felt this timor, and quickly
covered space over
with griffins, sea serpents,
herbs and brilliant carpets
of flowers - things pleasant
or unpleasant, no matter.
Of course they were cowards
and patronized by cowards
who liked their swards as
filled with birds as leaves.
All of them believed in
sudden edges and completely
barren patches in the mind,
and they didn’t want to
think about them all the time.
This speaks to me about my Fundie upbringing as well. So much fear of leaving empty spaces - of acknowledging the unknown, the uncontrollable, the secret. And then there is this one:
Emptiness
Emptiness cannot be
compressed. Nor can it
fight abuse. Nor is there
an endless West hosting
elk, antelope, and the
tough cayuse. This is
true also of the mind:
it can get used.
This next one is also good.
A Certain Kind of Eden
It seems like you could, but
you can’t go back and pull
the roots and runners and replant.
It’s all too deep for that.
You’ve overprized intention,
have mistaken any bent you’re given
for control. You thought you chose
the bean and chose the soil.
You even thought you abandoned
one or two gardens. But those things
keep growing where we put them -
if we put them at all.
A certain kind of Eden holds us thrall.
Even the one vine that tendrils out alone
in time turns on its own impulse,
twisting back down its upward course
a strong and then a stronger rope,
the greenest saddest strongest
kind of hope.
Nature in general is a significant source of metaphor to Ryan - both plant an animal. Here is another plant-based one.
So Different
A tree is lightly connected
to its blossoms.
For a tree it is is
a pleasant sensation
to be stripped
of what’s white and winsome.
If a big wind comes,
any nascent interest in fruit
scatters. This is so different
from humans, for whom
what is un-set matters
so oddly - as though
only what is lost held possibility.
That last last line is so good.
Force
Nothing forced works.
The Gordian knot just worsens
if it’s jerked at by a person.
One of the main stations
of the cross is patience.
Another, of course, is impatience.
There is such a thing as
too much tolerance
for unpleasant situations,
a time when the gentle
teasing out of threads
ceases to be pleasing
to a woman born for conquest.
Instead she must assault
the knot or alp or everest
with something sharp
and take upon herself
the moral warp of sudden progress.
I’ll end with one of a few poems about snakes. Ryan clearly shares my love for slithery reptiles.
Snake Charm
Oh for even a fingerling snake,
a three-inch inspiration full of
genetic information about length,
the making of venom, and the start
of muscles later on used for compression.
A snake, say, in a Moorish pattern, abstract,
ornamental, repeatable over a whole Toledo
without tedium. Yes, a snake the sun stretches,
a snake that improves everything it catches:
the adventitious mouse converted to stripes
or diamond patches. This snake is reckless,
with no concern for balance. It can
slide over any surface, a silent line,
an endless pattern, a generative rhyme.
Well, that’s a good taste of Kay Ryan, and a fun contrast with some of the other poems I have been reading lately. And also a good reminder to me to avoid stagnating with the old guys from long ago, and read something from my own lifetime now and again.
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