Lucky
Bones
By
Peter Meinke
University
of Pittsburgh Press
Pittsburgh,
PA
ISBN
13: 978-0-8229-6310-3
82
Pages
$15.95
Review
by Dennis Daly
Passion
trumps this frivolous world of detail—Belgian chocolates, Coppertone lotion,
dry martinis, bright ribbons, doubles tennis, and, heaven help us, sonnets.
Peter Meinke in his new collection of poems, Lucky Bones, quantifies the
passionate nature of interior intensity and hell-bent fervor by poking fun at
himself and humorously (or not) eviscerating a chosen set of targets inhabiting
this vale of tears that we call life. Many of his poetic commentaries Meinke delivers
in formalist verse with a cunning dry wit that both elucidates and cautions.
The
poet begins ominously with his first sectional poem entitled Drive-By
Shootings. Here he sets up his backdrop and shades it with bitters. Meinke
says,
…People pedal on bikes drop
Some money in the hole stick in their arms
get a shot and wobble away
Sometimes getting hit by cars the same
needle all afternoon
That’s the kind of world we live
in
Civilization
masks bloody-mindedness and boiling lust. Meinke’s piece Cassandra in the
Library alludes to ancient Troy while the poet simultaneously conjures up
modern academia and contemporary office life. Here’s the unpleasant heart of
the poem,
Poetry no wisdom withstands the test
of blood: when mind and body
clash
the mind’s the one whose opposition’s
rash
Killing
liquid work’s dust
Our craving for passion quenched by a
crimson lust
What can an office offer but a
cursed
routine an inane trivial bore?
A water cooler doesn’t slake the thirst
of blood that rages for a taste of war
a horde of disappointed men have dreams
fired by bursting flares and female screams
The
rhymes lighten the content thereby creating an odd but interesting
counterpoint. I very much like this poem.
Skewing
the Roman Catholic papacy can get old quickly and is not my cup of tea. However
when a bit of compressed wit like the poem Habemus Papum nudges me I can’t
resist. Habemus Papum, as announced by a cardinal from St. Peter’s Basilica
after a papal election concludes, means “we have a pope.” Meinke appears to
have tired of Vatican officialdom and its moribund language. He
celebrates/laments in this part of the piece,
O goodum! Habemus papum
who’ll soon intone
the usual crapum
and the poor poor will
weepum
Athletes
and poets have a lot in common up to and including their need to be loved and
appreciated in their own time. Unfortunately, the gods of sport and art operate
on a different timeframe. In Meinke’s title poem, Lucky Bones, a tennis player
of 78 years makes a great shot during a doubles game. He looks to his wife for
approval as he had done as a younger man. But time has passed. Meinke concludes
with pathos,
…his wife
who used to
toss car keys
that flashed
through light
like lucky
bones crying Hey
big
fella think fast!
And he thinks That’s
just past in my head
like a
re-eyed crow
and he’s
thinking Christ he
could still
catch them if she
were still there to throw
Armed
with talent enough to cause the doubling up in laughter of bards and bad
reviewers everywhere, Meinke takes on the sonnet in his piece Front-Rhymed
Easter Anti-Sonnet. His faux attack doesn’t miss a beat. Bucking revered
tradition he even removes the end rhyme scheme and transplants it at the line
beginnings. The untraditional cur! Consider these pretty funny lines,
… Bad enough you have to use
words without sinking the buggers in fourteen
lines O Shakespeare Milton what made you
signs?
O Meinke why are you writing another?
Who’s sick of sonnets? Iamb
Iamb
For
Emily Dickinson it’s all about repressed sex and mannered poetry in Meinke’s
excellent parody of that poet entitled Emily Dickinson Thinks about Buying a
Ribbon. There’s something about Dickinson that invites quality parody. I’m
thinking of X.J. Kennedy’s Emily Dickinson in Southern California. In Meinke’s
poem Dickinson debates the color of her prospective ribbon almost to the point
of indecency which, of course, is the point in this astonishingly deep piece,
I
would like to get red—
Vermillion
But father would disapprove
A serious Blue—then—worn loose
Like a Lover’s knot
A
decent one could strangle
With it—I’d have wine
Not
the barrell’d rum of Father’s
Then—let him come—
Meinke
takes great pleasure in self-deprecation. He gets away with it because he is
that good. His poem On Completing My PHD reads like an ongoing gag, but carries
with in some quite serious undertones and unasked questions. The poet concludes
by rattling off his educational symptoms,
And
I who’ve developed
a twitch a tic a cough
can’t tell if I am finished
or only finished off
I learned Byron had a clubfoot
Nietzsche’s health was drastic
Poe was a dipsomaniac
And I’m already spastic
I learned that Shakespeare really lived
so scholars have decided
Though quite a few have studied me
they’re not as sure that I did
The
poet again summons up academia in a villanelle entitled The Old Professor.
Keeping their eyes on Professor Warren’s nicotine-stained teeth as he
enlightens his students on New England’s luminaries can prove a didactically
sound methodology. Meinke explains,
…
Transfixed we
watched you grind your nubby teeth
to stumps
waiting for you to spur us through
our jumps
from Cotton Mather up through Emily
Is every pilgrim happy on the bus?
We never were sure when you were
serious
chaining your Camels unpuritanically
grinding your browning teeth to nubby stumps
and tossing questions far from
the syllabus:
Would you rather live on Broad or Beacon Street?
Are
Smith and Bradford riding the same bus?
Peter
Menke has been writing good, sometimes great poems for a long time. Whatever he
has for breakfast I want to try. This poet’s in top form.
*** originally appeared in the Fox Chase Review
*** originally appeared in the Fox Chase Review