Fifth Season: Poems.Anthony Butts. Fifth Season: Poems. Chelsea, MI: New Issues P, 1997. 52 pp. $12.00. Anthony Butts dedicates this first collection of poetry to "the imaginary gods," many of whom seem to live in this book as silent yet towering indications of the ways we construct lives within our lives. The poet meditates divinity within these poems as a condition of being caught between a material world that forsakes the individual and a spiritual world that beautifies even breath "on the loose clouds of winter blowing through rags / stuffed between a broken window and its screen." The first section, "Detroit, City of Straits," progresses through the airy, introductory poem of the same title, to the sturdy silent figures of "The Belle Isle Belle Isle, Strait of A channel between southeast Labrador and northwest Newfoundland, Canada. It is the northern entrance to the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Men," their voices murmuring mur·mur n. 1. A low, indistinct, continuous sound: spoke in a murmur; the murmur of the waves. 2. An indistinct, whispered, or confidential complaint; a mutter. 3. "the revenge of lust exchanged like rage," to the quiet reminiscence rem·i·nis·cence n. 1. The act or process of recollecting past experiences or events. 2. An experience or event recollected: "Her mind seemed wholly taken up with reminiscences of past gaiety" of "The Nature of Braille," in which the speaker remembers "the prettiest girl in the fifth grade" and the "glossy gray veils obscuring her eyes." These opening poems are laden with the lugubrious lu·gu·bri·ous adj. Mournful, dismal, or gloomy, especially to an exaggerated or ludicrous degree. [From Latin l voice of a boy cast as an Other among others-near-blind, black, and poor--as he savors "the joy / of the lonely: the inevitable call of the afterlife / within the shadows of childhood dreams." The second section, "Writing the Body," revisits the classical element with "Nocturne nocturne (nŏk`tûrn) [Fr.,=night piece], in music, romantic instrumental piece, free in form and usually reflective or languid in character. John Field wrote the first nocturnes, influencing Chopin in the writing of his 19 nocturnes for piano. ," while also revisioning the sentimental implications of the title with "signs of violence" and the child's exercise of "forgetting the next smack" from a parent, or his own anger directed toward "Darrel Barnes, the bully of / Wilson Junior High." The poetic landscape is rich with "weeping willows like a child / hanging onto the hard end / of a broomstick" and "frantic ducks ... sucked at by pot-bellied carp." Butts deconstructs the idea of pastoral innocence so that the city and its sin flood the reader, as in "Small Atrocities" where, for "an orphaned child," the "night comes on like an apocalypse apocalypse (əpŏk`əlĭps) [Gr.,=uncovering], genre represented in early Jewish and in Christian literature in which the secrets of the heavenly world or of the world to come are revealed by angelic mediation within a narrative / of solace, the evident ease of shadows / taking him in like a relative, his eyes / edging away." The collection settles further into revisioning classical themes in the final section, "The Imaginary Gods," a series of poems recalling, sometimes more through title than progression, the Orphean myth. Here, as in Orpheus Descendin g," myth is located in "the crescent moon crescent moon Mary often depicted standing on or above moon. [Christian Iconog.: Brewer Dictionary, 726] See : Ascension hanging low / over Lake Michigan; the upper section / of a fractured hourglass hourglass, glass instrument for measuring time, usually consisting of two bulbs united by a narrow neck. One bulb is filled with fine sand that runs through the neck into the other bulb in an hour's time. " as time "passes in increments / of wishes like the mysterious / bulbs projecting themselves / into the air." The final poems of the book creep out of the quiet resolve in earlier poems, and are more daring in the forthright declarations of a speaker who seeks to "peel back the layers of God's skin." Butts brings us to his final meditation within the "Envoi en·voi n. Variant of envoy2. Noun 1. envoi - a brief stanza concluding certain forms of poetry envoy stanza - a fixed number of lines of verse forming a unit of a poem ," allowing the poem "Skin" to show us, for the first time, the persona motivating many of the poems throughout the book. The speaker refutes his own presence in "a world of desire. . . too strong" where "true memories are fires within" as a means to both take ownership of the verse and also to make a gift of it and of his quiet yet ardent voice, "a rapid angel since falling / to earth." |
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