Parts of Everything in Days& Days, Michael Dickman’s new book of poetry
article
by Michael Steffen
With
the haystack of 2019 comes the needle of Michael Dickman’s fourth
book of poems,
Days
& Days,
a renewal, extension and honing of the poet’s vision and craft
quietly polarized,
as
Franz Wright recognized, with “utmost gravity as well as a kind of
cosmic wit.” Over again the poems’ speaker widens our look with
surprising combinations salted with colloquial signatures—“shuvit
in the gloxinia on the first try” (“Butterfly Days,” page 3).
While
the whole assemblage of the book would seem to stand every
traditional notion about poetry, language and sense on its head—which
in itself isn’t new or radical in poetry—deeply familiar notes
are sounded, beginning with the title and its evocation of a pastoral
awareness—
I
wanted to say “celebration”—of time, fulfilled by a
preoccupation in the poems with nature, urban or suburban albeit,
with trees and shrubs, flowers, (pieces of) grass, butterflies and
butterflies, crape myrtles, pear blossoms, deer pellets, tea and test
roses, fringed tulips, something dull in the bushes is that a
rabbit?…
A
normal juxtaposition of terms expects Days
to be followed by &
Nights.
James Merrill had
a
book of poems with that title. And so Days
& Days
strikes us also with a Kafkaesque sense of the technological day we
live in and cannot turn off.
I
picked up everything in the house & set it all back down just to
the
left of the clicker (“Lakes Rivers Streams,” page 118)
If
more classically it is Hesiod’s
Works & Days
we are just missing here, the title Days
& Days
becomes more burdened and ominous, especially in Dickman’s
portrayal of time’s lapses.
These
conditions somewhat give rise to and affirm Dickman’s alterity,
especially his mincing and fizzling of our principle sources and
signs:
Some
sun above the day
a
squiggly light that waits round or
scribbles
over
a
school of Radio Cabs
&
bubble letters
A
doe
A
deer
A
female deer
Traffic
moves in
the
leaves & then stops
to
say hello (“Scribble,” page 9)
The
overall arrangement of the book, meanwhile, reveals structuring, with
four poems in the first section titled “The Poem Said,” a theme
of roses, actual or otherwise, central to the second section (ROSE
PARADE), and the third part of the book set in a long poem Dickman
calls “Lakes Rivers Streams,” with a nod to John Ashbery The long
poem coheres attentively though not laboriously by way of anaphor,
repetitions of “The day” personified as subject, the odd use of
“ditto” here and there, and an almost robo-linguistic reprising
of “For instance.”
Generally,
Dickman’s is language poetry, with an insistence on the
preservation of the naïve spirit of creativeness, and on the
necessary failure of correspondence between sign and thing, lest the
correlative archons and tyranny of the day win us over.
I
would go there right now
folded
up in the silence of a maple tree in the front yard
A
tiara
if
I could get one leaf right
&
sleep in air (“The Poem Said,” page 10)
Where
meaning seems insistently to elude us, it sneaks back up on us…almost
everywhere. To humanize the traffic in that last strophe with “&
then stops/to say hello” is a keen deflation of the poet’s method
and terms. It is a stroke of humor, humility and self-awareness, a
sudden grin of friendliness from the alien and fugitive procedure and
manner of Dickman’s elsewhere noted austerity.
From
the onset of the collection, we know our ventures of personality are
not made to a facile welcome on the horizon, with—
something
else
more
difficult to describe
a
dustup
around
a brown & orange aura
or
Lorca’s flowers
The
page under its poem’s heading “Butterfly Days” begins in
paradox already with reference to an ending: “icing on a
cake”—however associated with the residual or sticky, ceremonial,
artificial. Icing. Beginning ending. Ending beginning. It is as odd
and yet apt this book of copious near-handed wonders (“Neighbor
dogs are kind & hunt balls to death”) should conclude with an
embodied image of our foremost bearings of first things,
In
the morning the kids come running down the stairs (“LRS,” page
121).
Days
& Days
poems
by Michael Dickman
is
published by Alfred A. Knopf
ISBN
9780525655473 (hardcover)
available
for $27.00
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