My favorite poem in this book, up
there with Bengal Tiger, When you Select the
Daughter Card, Sea Church, and Penguin
Valentine, is Dream Caused by the
Flight of a Bee Around a Pomegranate One Second Before Waking Up. Not only
is it after a Salvador Dalí painting that I know, it’s after a Salvador Dalí
painting that I’ve for a long time considered my favorite. I first saw this
painting in my high school Spanish class, when we were studying Spanish artists,
a new artist each week or two. I liked it for the aesthetic: two tigers leaping
out of a fish’s mouth towards a sleeping woman, a floating shotgun pointed at her,
the moment before she wakes up. It made something in my disaffected teenage
heart happy for whatever reason. Seeing this painting again in Nezhukumatathil’s
poem also made my disaffected young- adult heart happy, for the way it
conceptualized time and dreams.
Here
is the mouth of a fish / wide with wonder at the twin tigers leaping out/ from
it- roaring with the ocean salt till they’ve soared above // a floating
pomegranate, a heart full of seed. / In twenty-four / microseconds, a stick of
dynamite will ex- // plode after its fuse burned down. Houseflies flick / their
wings once / every three milliseconds. Even that fly is / long gone // to the
other side of the yard in the time it / took to write flick. / Giant tortoises and compact discs last one / hundred
years.
I have the kindle
version of this book, which means the spacing is probably wrong, so I apologize
if this is not accurate to how the lines appear in the printed text. But I love
how she deals with interior and exterior time in this poem, the interior time
of dreams and the exterior time of reality. All of the multitudes that can be
contained in a microsecond and then the part about tortoises and compact discs
lasting one hundred years- as well as the billions of years it would take for “the
last waxy smudge of me to stop loving you”, which I thought was very sweet. The
fly is gone by the time its presence is vocalized by the word flick but the tortoise and the CD will
be here a hundred years from now, even though we will be long gone, the CD will
be like the word flick vocalizing our
presence. It’s kind of sweet until you remember that a hundred years from now,
a CD (already being replaced by digital music) will be nothing but pollution.
Like in several of her other poems, the theme of environmental pollution is
brought up. It takes a billion years for an ocean to form, and according to the
internet a million years for one glass bottle to decompose. It takes a thousand
glass bottles to make an ocean.
When You Select the Daughter Card got me
thinking about my own identity as a daughter, which has changed as I’ve gotten
older, but remains an important part of myself. Seeing a daughter card appear
in a Tarot deck would be so cool: “the power flowing / through the Daughter is
oceanic, the / rupture / of pillow lava on the sea floor” There’s often not a
lot of power accredited to daughters as compared to sons: traditionally sons were
the ones who inherited, who carried on the family name, got educated, etc. and
daughters stayed home and then eventually got married and absorbed into the
family of their husband, “symbolizing a harmony between earth and the dazzle of
the sea”. I appreciate how the quiet and fluctuating identity of being a
daughter is characterized by the ocean, which is actually very noisy and deeply
rooted.
I also like the
characterization of the ocean as a maternal figure, both in this poem and in Sea Church: “I ask for the grace / of a
new freckle / on my cheek, the lift / of blue and my mother’s / soapy skin to
greet me.” although the ocean is compared to a church in this poem, I read the
mother’s soapy skin as part of the ocean here. The line about sometimes being a
mermaid in Daughter Card I read as
being the daughter of the ocean, and sometimes walking on land as being either
the wife of land or as being also the daughter of land, if the husband or the
father is considered land. Walking on the edge of two families, in balance, is
what daughters are supposed to do.
This book had me
at Self Portrait as a Scallop, when a
tightly clamped shell with a hundred eyes (did not know scallops had that many
eyes) gets cracked open by a sea-bird and resigns to it. What a great way to
start a book of poems, as cracking open the inside of a previously silent and
unknown thing, with a hundred eyes worth of observations to be had: “I’m no
longer silent. None of them told
me // if you were hungry enough—the small hinge // of my umbo would creak and sigh.”
Maggie, I felt your reading of Nezhukumatahil's work in so many ways! I love the way you internalized her words and feelings on pollution and the environment to a level that inspired you to evaluate the thought even more: "It takes a billion years for an ocean to form, and according to the internet a million years for one glass bottle to decompose. It takes a thousand glass bottles to make an ocean."
ReplyDeleteAlso, I agreed with your choice to view some of the poems through the lens of a daughter mother relationship. I considered Nezhukumatahil's whole meditation on the ocean came from a place of feeling connected to it, a kinship and gratitude for it's beauty and the beauty it passed along to her as well.
Really good, Maggie. You read so much of this as intergenerational and feminine, which makes the poems feel transcendent.
ReplyDeletee
Maggie, I really like the mother-daughter connection made in Nezhukumatahil's work, too. The reevaluation of what it means to be a mother, and a daughter, and how those identities evolve and change as we do. I'm not a mother, but I'm a daughter who has to re-navigate those unknowns.
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