Friday, November 22, 2024

Red Letter Poem #231

  The Red Letters

 

 

In ancient Rome, feast days were indicated on the calendar by red letters.

To my mind, all poetry and art serves as a reminder that every day we wake together beneath the sun is a red-letter day.

 

––Steven Ratiner

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Red Letter Poem #231

 

 

             





Aphasia Poem 2


cultivate vigilance.

as single words lose their coherence

wait for the moment born decisive.



slash chop each every green

thought let it all to dry to all dry

kindling stumps seasoned words dormant roots.



ignite slashed felled tree-words.

sentient combustion burns hot leaves

nothing but curtains ash gardens smoke.



sow morphemes in the moon’s

fertile clear æther rain craters where

seed sounds in earth light can germinate.



without words enchanted syllables

elude broken language broken world.


––Robert Guzikowski


It was the most poetic postal address I’ve ever had: Green House, Brown Road, Vestal. Back in those golden days, if you penned simply that on a stamped envelope, it would eventually appear inside my tinny roadside mailbox. Some friends and I rented this ramshackle farmhouse in the hills above our college campus––and on the tail end of this country road (named for farmer Brown who once owned and worked those sprawling acres) were three old dwellings: green, red, and white. The colors were the only signifier the postman needed. Bob Guzikowski, another poet, lived in the White House and we became friends––but, after graduation, lost track of each other as so often happens, and the decades rose like smoke trails. But, through the power of the Internet, I recently heard from Karen Keefe, Bob’s wife (and a poet in her own right) when she discovered the Red Letter Project, and she wanted to send me Bob’s new book. She was writing for him because, back in the 1990’s, Bob suffered from encephalitis which damaged his brain and left him with a number of disabling conditions, aphasia chief among them. Often the result of a stroke, traumatic injury or infection, aphasia is a communications disorder which, in its most severe cases, can make speaking, reading, or writing nearly impossible. These severed connections with the ones you love are, of course, extremely isolating, though therapies can often help. It’s a condition that affects over 2,000,000 Americans––but it seems an especially cruel fate for a man for whom words and communication were paramount. But Bob is not the sort to surrender easily.



After decades of hard work, Bob has produced Unwordly (UnCollected Press), a collection of poems with (dare I say) an unworldly sense of magic and surprise. He’s made his condition both the subject of and the engine powering his poetry, disassembling and reconstructing the very elements of language and cognition so we might see how this most vital, and most tenuous of experiences really operates. In some poems, what we’ve come to expect of ‘normal’ syntax is stretched to its very limits; words become like birdsong, beautiful but hovering at the tantalizing edge of significance. Or, in poems like “Aphasia 2,” he places his readers inside the neural maelstrom as the speaker tries to offer his meanings and we readers struggle to receive them. “slash chop each every green” (and for a moment we’re imagining someone taking a scythe to unruly fields)––but no, the enjambment reveals it to be “green/thought” the poet’s harvesting. And soon he’s put the torch to these cuttings––“sentient combustion”––and we see the world through fresh eyes beyond the scrim of customary understanding: “nothing but curtains ash gardens smoke.” How lovely, to imagine those unencumbered syllables germinating “in the moon’s/ fertile clear æther.” How deeply satisfying––for any poet–– when we sense we are able to impress upon this complex system of sound, some bit of insight, some trace of joy––and we, for a moment, “elude broken language broken world.”



Robert Guzikowski (I must address him now, not as an old friend but a fellow poet) published his work in a number of magazines prior to his illness, but the poems he’s painstakingly produced since have found enthusiastic acceptance in journals like The Raw Art Review, Wild Roof Journal, Kissing Dynamite, Full Mood Magazine, Fig:ment, and others. Earlier on, he was also a performance artist and one of the founding editors of the Parlor City Review. But reading through unwordly, I was reminded of the line from Auden––often quoted by people attempting to undermine the scope of poetic power: “poetry makes nothing happen.” It must be remembered, this phrase occurs in a poem dedicated to a poet (Yeats) who most definitely made things happen in the world––and goes on to say: it [poetry] survives/ In the valley of its making. . .flows on south/ From ranches of isolation and the busy griefs,/ Raw towns that we/ believe and die in; it survives,/ A way of happening, a mouth.” I think Auden would recognize these very qualities in the poetry here; Robert has taken in all that’s occurred within his life, transformed it, empowered it, passed it on. These poems happen, right there on the page and on the willing tongue. I am grateful these messages found their way to my door.

 

 

 

Red Letters 3.0

 

* If you would like to receive these poems every Friday in your own in-box – or would like to write in with comments or submissions – send correspondence to:

steven.arlingtonlaureate@gmail.com

 

 

To learn more about the origins of the Red Letter Project, check out an essay I wrote for Arrowsmith Magazine:

https://www.arrowsmithpress.com/community-of-voices

 

and the Boston Area Small Press and Poetry Scene

http://dougholder.blogspot.com

 

For updates and announcements about Red Letter projects and poetry readings, please follow me on BlueSky

@stevenratiner.bsky.social

and on Twitter          

@StevenRatiner

Somerville Photographer Marc Occil: His work blazes out at you with an emotional spectrum




Recently I caught up with Somerville photographer Marc Occil. I was struck by his photographs of the  "Occupy Boston" protests in Boston. He generously answered some questions that I sent his way


How has it been for you as an artist to live and or work in Somerville, Ma.?

I've lived in Somerville for quite some time. It was a kind of culture shock when I moved here in my adolescence. There was a lot to get used to. A lot underlying social negativity at that time to navigate. Because of that, I mostly only lived in Somerville and focused my work on the bordering neighborhoods in towns outside of Somerville. It wasn't until recently that I was made aware of the possible resources available to artists within Somerville.

I read references to you as a " ground photographer." How do you define that?

I came up with the title from the military term "boots on the ground". These are individuals who are positioned on the front lines to witness an event firsthand. "On The Ground Photography," (or O.T.G.P), is visual storytelling through my eyes events and places I've witnessed.  It is something I can leave behind, If nothing else, then what I've seen.

You have a book of photographs that was published that dealt with the Occupy Boston Movement in Boston, back in 2011. What drew you to this event as a subject for your work?

Three years prior, I witnessed a life-altering event I didn't think I would see in my lifetime, and it altered my perspective. When the Arab Spring happened, there was so little information given at the time because it wasn't happening here. I really wasn't paying that close attention to the news at that time. I had on a lot of blinders. But what little was getting through, one of the things that was being talked about was the possibility of us going into a depression. Then I heard about "Occupy Wall Street." Thought it might make a good subject to capture. Then "Occupied Boston" happened. When it first started I was being dismissive of it. I thought it was trying to be a carbon copy of what was happening in Manhattan. But then I realized I was being close-minded. I decided to visit the encampment. Listen to the stories. Capture a few images. It turned into three and a half months and over 5,000 images. It was the humanity that drew me.

Does your work have a decidedly political edge to it? Are you political person by nature?

HA! $#@& No! And yet, I understand the intricate workings of that particular brand of Kung Fu. In 1992, when the LA police were acquitted of all charges of the beating of Rodney King-- against such damning and irrefutable evidence.-- I turned to a man much, MUCH smarter than me and asked, "How was this possible?" And the only answer he could give me was that it was political. As intelligent as he was there was no way he could figure out how to communicate the injustice that occurred other than regurgitating a sound bite. So I had to learn how this politics stuff worked on my own.  I wanted to come to some form of acceptance of what just occurred... (And then a decade later the "West Wing" smoothed out all the bumps of that patchwork education. :)


I have always admired the work of Walker Evans, Dianne Arbus, etc... They often inspire my poetry. How about you—who are your inspirations and why?


Gordon Parks. A Renaissance man in a time where such an individual could be killed with ease for expressing himself in any way shape or form. He blazed the trail that left permanent shadows in the earth, and he did it without guidance.

Joseph Louw. For being at the worst place the worst possible time and still having the wherewithal to exercise his craft to capture one of the most horrific moments in time.

“It was just a matter of realizing the horror of the thing. Then I knew I must record it for the world to see.”

Berenice Abbott. Manhattan's first unofficial publicist. If there was ever an individual who could capture a city like a still life model. Raw. Naked. Demure. Slightly coquettish with a sprinkling of "Je ne sais quoi."

Why should we view your work?

Because for a still, inanimate, often lacking color, rectangular window, it's loud.. Like, volume turned up to 11, LOUD. It is often teeming with life even though it's just a sliver of it. It is dark situation, it blazes out at you with an emotional spectrum. It is something that happened in front of you but you didn't see it at the time because it went by with the speed of a snap of a finger. It's our lives in a box.