Poet Dorinda Hale |
Interview with Somerville Poet Dorinda Hale: Author of 'Disorientation and the Weather'
with Doug Holder
Poet Dorinda Hale arrived at my table
at the Bloc 11 Cafe with a frosted pastry of some kind and a rich,
roasted coffee. Hale, who has lived in Somerville since 1974-- was here
to talk about her first book of poetry released by the Finishing Line
Press, “Disorientation and the Weather.”
Hale is originally from a small town in
Vermont—and when she moved to Somerville back in the day—she
found a neighborhood that was peaceful and quiet much like her
seminal grounds in Vermont. Hale told me, “ Somerville is a good
place to be. It is a community I feel very comfortable with.” In
terms of gentrification of the city she told me, “ It's great to
see all the new babies around town. Gentrification has been
responsible for increasing the value of my home. However, it saddens
me how everything is so expensive now. I hope the new influx of
people will have the same emotional commitment to the community that
I experienced decades ago.”
Like many poets Hale has worked a
number of different gigs over the years. In the course of her varied
career, she has worked as a manager of a commercial translation
project for Kodak, she had a stint at a junior college, and worked as
a freelance editor. She wound up working steadily in the high tech
sector until she was laid off.
After leaving the tech industry she
asked herself, “ What's next?” She has been writing and publishing for years. Her work has appeared in
such journals as the Atlanta Review, The Wilderness House Literary
Review, and elsewhere. So she decided to put together a book--
thus this new volume.
I asked Hale about one of her poems in
her new collection, titled “ After Grief.” She uses a repeated
line “swell of light” in this highly structured villanelle, which is is a nineteen-line poem with two repeating rhymes and two refrains. Hale said
of this poem, “It reflected how I felt at my brother's death, and
that “swell of light “ that repeatedly turns up in the poem is
all about the connection with the dead.'
Hale works with both free verse and
rhyme. She said, “ I write a lot of free verse too, but I I like
the challenges of rhyme and formal meter.”
I asked Hale, "Why should someone read your collection. She replied, “ Because they will feel better. They
will find psychological states that are hard to describe-- but are
familiar. When confronting pain and expressing pain in the
poem—well--it can bring comfort.”
Hale told me she will be speaking at
the Harvard Memorial Church. She will answer a question posed by the
minister of the said church after he perused her book-- "What do
we owe the world?"' And I just bet that Hale has the answer.
AFTER GRIEF
She remains in place, a site
and keeps her body with him
unbroken in a swell of light.
He’s leaned away, though not in flight
hears a cadence meant for him
yet remains in place, a site
bold and burnished, hers despite
the keen constraint, the spell of
rhythm.
Unbroken in a swell of light
our dead can sing to us, invite
a waning heart to shelter: an interim
that remains in place, a site
where porous love may dwell. What
sleight
of hand unveiled this layered scrim
now unbroken in a swell of light
and let the soak of ties outright
claim her, hold him, allow them
to remain in place—a site
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