The Contrarian Voice
and other poems
by Ernest Hebert
Bauhan Publishing
P. O. Box 117
Peterborough, NH 03458
ISBN9780872332485
What a pleasure to pick up a book of poems and find myself well
into it without once halting in puzzlement, encountering poems clothed in
obscurities of diction, syntax and metaphor. Poems that seem designed to make you
feel as if the appreciation of poetry requires membership in a cult of superior
sensibility, from which you, philistine, are excluded for your unfashionable
taste. I feel that such poems, like the emperor, have no clothes, while these
poems of Ernest Hebert are made of solid, worn from labor, denim, because, from
the beginning lines of the book,
I loved what I could compare to
what I loved.
The surface of a pond is slightly
curved
as is music from a violin and the
violin itself.
as I tried them on, one after another, they fit.
Twenty minutes later, when I finished the first of the
book’s four sections, “Septuagenarian Look-Back,” I felt that Ernest Hebert deserves
as much attention as Billy Collins. His poetry shares a sardonic perspective
with Collins. Here is “The Dogs of Tunapuna, Trinidad” from this section in
support of my thesis:
The streets are full of them,
big-balled dogs with torn up flanks
and limping bitches with prominent
tits.
They sleep the day and roam the
night
to mate, quarrel, and carry on.
for a couple of hours you hear
only an occasional bark or yelp,
then all of a sudden half a dozen
will start in.
Soon the entire island is howling.
It all sounds comic,
until you realize that these
creatures
are killing and maiming one another
over useless territory and loveless
fucking,
just like the rest of us,
a response to evolution,
spittle from the God Roar.
The last three words of that poem reappear in the long title
for the second section: “Poems Inspired by, The
God Roar (a novel I never wrote, which in turn was inspired by a sculpture
by Brenda Garand.)” The section begins with “Hypothermia,” when “I” discovers “You”
in a snowdrift, near death from the cold. “I” rescues “You” and undresses “You’s”
unconscious body and warms it with his and “You” recovers as they share his
sleeping bag and have this conversation:
"Come to consciousness, I
said.
"Do I know you?" You
said.
"I hardly know myself," I
said.
We lay quiet and still for an hour,
then I asked why you came into
these woods.
You said, "Listen."
"I don't hear anything."
"Yes you do – listen."
"I hear it now,
the tick and scrape of tree
branches."
"How nice when the wind blows
through the tops
of the trees and underneath it's
still."
"You came for that, a
sound?"
"Yes, the God Roar, to record
it for posterity.
…”
However, the possibility of intimacy contained in this
beginning remains unfulfilled in the seven poems of this section that are the
fragments of a strange and dreamlike story told by "I." The plot elements
sketched in these poems left me intrigued but dissatisfied. They are analogous
to Sargent’s studies for the murals in the rotunda of Boston’s MFA, which are engaging
in reference to the complete work, but of marginal interest without it.
Fortunately, with the third section, “Poems and Songs in the
Darby Chronicles,” Hebert is back in full voiced empathy for the Yankees and
French Canadians who worked in the mills and were abandoned when Capital moved
their work south to our Free Trade Zone with the Carolinas. The “Darby
Chronicles” are a series of seven novels Hebert has written about a fictional New
Hampshire town and the inhabitants of the surrounding hills; each poem in this
section is attributed to a character in one of those novels. This one,
“Untitled,” is belongs to Hadly Blue in A
Little More than Kin:
This sea in her gift for
composition
has made a place, if not self,
for that rock, that kelp.
Thus I am unconcerned
that my hat has blown away,
that the gulls are laughing:
"There is less of him than
usual."
By the fourth section, "Howard Elman: An Old Working
Man's Meditations," the sardonic humor of Septuagenarian that is the
muscle in the voice of the first section has matured by 10 years:
Plow Guy's Lament
…[four lines]
Octogenarian walked over to the
truck.
Junior rolled down the window.
"How come you, not your
dad?"
"He bought the farm
yesterday,"
Junior said, just as calmly
as one talking about the weather.
…[14 lines]
Junior's only emotion
at the moment was glee
at the thought of inheriting
an almost new truck.
The grief would come later.
The concluding and title poem of the volume, "The
Contrarian Voice," that follows, begins as Elman, now a widower, gives us
a catalog of grieves that for him came later:
Munch on a village store grinder
while you imagine Wife
standing at the sink
and gazing out the window
at her birdfeeder,
just as she had done in life.
Tell her how sad you are:
connections and conniption fits
that enriched your life,
the Centenarian’s stew pot,
involuntarily memorized glimpses
of trees, stone walls, ledges,
old mossy gravestones,
fences and hosses and cows
…
This poem of 309 lines is a collection of more catalogs;
some are angry; some are nostalgic (and of those some are regretful); and some
are playful and speculative, as when he sends an email to his Sane Daughter:
Saint Peter, cranky gatekeeper of
Catholic heaven
and frequent lurker on the
Internet,
intercepts message to Sane
Daughter.
Checks it off as a venial sin
and files it in the database.
Saint Peter is tired. This job is a
lot of work.
Slips a note in the Judgment Day
Suggestion Box:
How
about an honorable mention
for
the lab mice who did more
for
the species who enslaved them
than
the species did for themselves?
This introduction of Saint Peter is followed by a catalog of
possible ways that Elman might die framed as an argument with himself. At its
conclusion, “You don't have a prayer./‘I don't have a prayer,” Hebert
reintroduces Saint Peter to answer Elman's assumption of damnation with one
final catalog, which suggests that redemption will be granted to Elman and to
all working stiffs just for the virtue of their being working class:
You don’t have a prayer.
I don’t have a prayer.
Saint Peter doesn't have a prayer,
so he checks the historical record,
bumps his forehead with his palm,
and calls out in Octogenarian’s
voice,
talking in his sleep,
“Jesus, I get it now:
the ones with no education,
the ones who made mistakes in youth
and paid for them over a lifetime,
the ones who built the idiot
pyramids,
and the useless cathedrals,
and that stupid wall in China,
…[seven lines]
and who appeared in apparitions in
the minds
of soldiers calling for their
mothers
as they lay bleeding out on the
battlefield,
and who fucked the bosses to save
us all –
they are all fucked.
And fucked again.
And fucked over.
And fucked forever,
us, the working people.”
After speaking this I think Peter should exchange his mythic
robes of white silk for working ones of denim, faded from hard use and many washings.
--
Wendell Smith
We have performers of almost every type imaginable!
ReplyDeleteImpressive in its hard edged truth told with lyric precision. I'm glad to know about this poet.
ReplyDelete