Two Star General
By Grey Held
Brick Road Poetry Press
ISBN-13: 978-0-9841005-8-3
ISBN-10: 0-9841005-8-X
57 Pages
$15.95
Review by Dennis Daly
In the best of circumstances the
relationship between father and son tends towards complexity. Even a game of
catch, the American emblem of that relationship, often devolves into rebellion
when the boy tests his new found adolescent freedom against fatherly restraints
and concerns. Now add to this paradigm a father who doubles as a military man,
a leader who gives orders and expects immediate obedience. And finally add to
this mix the rank of general; the father and leader now becomes a strategist
who often must, and certainly should, sacrifice individual compassion for long
term outcomes. Now we have an interesting and combustible consociation of
dependency and paternal kinship.
In Two Star General Grey Held’s
persona confronts his father and commanding general at odd angles and with the
sensitivity and transcendence of a new-found understanding of human decency.
The poem Under his Command gets right to the point,
We go to the Commissary
Drug
Store so he can buy me
aviator sunglasses, though
what
I want is the Elvis Presley kind,
but he says, not
for
a two star general’s son!
He takes me to Uncle Sam’s
Barbecue,
which
I’ve never liked,
so he can get his favorite ribs.
In the same poem he puts his
fathers’ serf-absorption in its proper military context. He relates a very
telling story how his dad
...once
drank scotch with McArthur
and told him, I know you and I
will get along just fine.
He
just took it when McArthur answered,
if there’s any getting along to
do, Sir,
you’d
better be the one to do it.
If your well-respected superiors have
a way of making you feel small, it is only natural that those under your
command, including a son, will get at least a taste of similar treatment.
The poet divides his book into
two sections. The first sees life through a general’s eyes. In the second
section the son of the general becomes the poet’s persona.
In the poem Fort Benning ,
Georgia 1942 the callous but sensible
general describes his technique of training raw recruits how to kill using a
bayonet. He says,
…
I make them practice
sticking their weapons between
the vivid
ribs
of Savannah’s put-down
dogs I have them hang by rope
from
branches of the drill field’s oaks.
I want them to feel resistance
and retraction,
to
witness the propulsion of sudden
blood—so much the better…
This hardened man knows how to
save lives and in his own way—once you get by the stabbing of the dog’s
bodies—cares profoundly and imaginatively for the humanity of his charges.
To be hard is one thing but to be
totally aware of it is quite another. Awareness after all leads to
consideration of feelings and all around sappiness. The general explains in a poem entitled
Sleepless,
On the army cot, I kiss the palm
of
my own hand, wishing it were
my sweetheart. I miss the way
her
instinctive fingers could amaze
her Steinway, one note rising,
one note
kneeling.
I have been 2 years 5 months
gone…
Back to the father and son
relationship. Being a tough-ass dad is bad enough, but being an absentee dad
easily trumps other short comings. And absentee-ness very often begins in the
beginning.
The opening of the poem entitled
Day My Son Is Born puts you inside the general’s conflicted head and it’s not
pretty,
My son reports for duty
as
the cord gets cut.
And where am I?
off
somewhere buffing
Two silver stars…
On the battlefield numbers rise
in importance beyond the personalities and flesh and blood they represent. In
the poem Spit the general makes this clear,
More men arrive, enough to plug
the
holes in three battalions.
They are just rounds of
ammunition,
replaceable
parts in the Machine.
The poem Landmines also gives us
scary insight into this general’s mind. The general explains,
If you were to dismantle a bomb,
ask
the right question of the fuse.
Rely on tweezer-work to negate
the
panic side. Remember
every overtaken village must be
dissected
into
friend or thin transparency.
Don’t assume the innocence of the
nameless
shanties…
Good generals never assume
innocence.
In the poem, Home of the Brave,
the poet’s persona, now the son, observes closely as his mother tapes up the
general’s broken toe and fuels a precious moment of family happiness as she
starts to laugh
huge laughter,
until tears drag rivulets
of eyeliner down her cheeks.
And my father, who rarely
seems happy, seems happy’
almost proud…
In Skeet Shooting the poet back
up a bit and accepts some of the blame for the strained relationship. He says,
Marry within the faith,
be
a soldier, not a poet.
And why didn’t I scream, I’m not
you!
but
blamed him instead.
Lately, he’s stopped playing
the
part of gunpowder to my trigger.
In fact the poet had become just
like his father, but without the military necessity. He confesses in the poem After All:
Didn’t I have to convince you
when
I left to start college
you needed a new typewriter,
so
I could take your old one with me
determined as I was to be a poet,
just
because
you were not.
In the poem, Balance is the
Riddle the general now becomes the child and the poet kneels to tie his shoes.
In Veterans’ Day Parade the poet steadies him during the festivities. And
finally in Death of a General the respectful and dutiful poet-son says,
I
take off his false coat,
put on this shroud, stitched from
thunder,
buttoned
into mud.
These are honest poems not easily
written by a poet who comes to terms with a decent man in a difficult but
necessary profession. Both father and son deserve our admiration.
And to add to the complexity, we live in a society in which the very concept of authority is viewed with suspicion.
ReplyDeletePoetry relies on visual and oral communication to express one’s feeling.
ReplyDeleteGrey's beautiful, evocative poems make me cry for the distance fathers and sons, of which I am both, yearn to close.
ReplyDelete