In “The Death Poem You Asked For,” the Steiny Road Poet
thinks that Chad Davidson is messing with the reader or at least the you to whom the poem is addressed. The poem, one of two by Davidson published in volume 40 of the Birmingham Poetry Review, hints in
the beginning line with the word ironic—“Largely ironic, the image persists”—that things may be contrary or
opposite to what one would expect. Certainly in a journal where the featured poet, Claudia Emerson, sets the tone for elergy and BPR
editor-in-chief Adam Vines and his staff have selected numerous poems dealing
with loss through death, grief, and the celebration of departed friends and well-known
contributors to our culture, one might guess from Davidson’s title that this
poem will be a memorial tribute.
In this
one-stanza-long free-verse poem of 25 lines written by an omniscient narrator most
of the verbs are in the present tense. Some man known to the you—the narrator
refers to this acquaintanceship in these words “the last year you cared about
him”—is imagined as a prophet with “hair done up for the summer,” wearing “the
severe garments/in the capital city of the unloved.” This man at some literal
dark hour seems to be mixed up with political intrigue, blackout dates, rush
hours, squadrons of mosquitoes, and harassment of a priest. However, the
narrator indicates:
…Whatever
he does,
he does
it everywhere: in the gleam
of a
Pontiac up on blocks, in tight jeans
and the
legs within, in Cincinnati somewhere,
where a
couple of other things happened
last
year…
And
whether it is everywhere or a dull place like Cincinnati where not too many
things happen, this man seems to be stalking the you.
…he’s
outside your door now,
peering
through the peephole, eyeing you
eyeing
him, asking, with the nonchalance
of an
alchemist hovering over his cauldron
of
lead, What shall I make you, dear?
This
leads the Steiny Poet to wonder again about the persisting image of this man
and the irony of it. Should the reader assume he is a larger-than-life ghost
meriting discussion in the presence tense, located just on the other side…of
You’s door, a mysterious man who might be able to turn lead into gold as any
alchemist worth his salt might do? Or is Davidson, through his omniscient
narrator, messing around and not producing the Voodoo necessary to expunge this annoying
man from You’s life?
If the
conundrum bothers you, Dear Reader, then focus on the Davidson’s lush turn of
phrase:
…
self-absorbed
as a child’s tongue,
desiring
nothing but to hear itself
in the
furious sameness of its fuselage.
The
Steiny Poet loves the idea that the body of the child is named as fuselage. Here Davidson is talking about
a temper tantrum the man is having. Later when Davidson declares that this man
does what he does everywhere, the Steiny Poet couldn’t help thinking about how
the layers of symbolic language had given this man a flying body like one that
describes the interior of an airplane.
Here’s
another example, perhaps a little less complicated, but it ventures into an
area the Steiny Poet would identify as metapoetics:
Or maybe he turns some priest
into a beggar rattling his coins,
or hacks off like a butcher the gristle
of his sentences.
If one assumes that the sentences being spoken in this part
of the poem refer to some unidentified priest, then the main character of this poem is some how editing the
indigestible words (gristle) coming from the priest. It is writerly comment on
what one would assume is an oral scene where the priest is talking versus the
main character reading and marking up a text. This edgy disconnect is what the
Steiny Poet would label metapoetics.
Chad Davidson is a challenging read but slow down and
bother. This poet is worth the effort.
1 comment:
Karren, it's wonderful to see your editorial mind at work here. Reading the way you process Chad's work helps me understand how you have seen my own poems. This understanding will be very useful as I continue to write and RE-write new works. Thanks!
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