For a Modest God: New and Selected Poems.Eric Ormsby, For a Modest God: New and Selected Poems. Grove Press, 139 pages, $20 "Entre deux mots, il faut choisir le moindre," Valery once counselled. Prodigally, Eric Ormsby has spurned spurn v. spurned, spurn·ing, spurns v.tr. 1. To reject disdainfully or contemptuously; scorn. See Synonyms at refuse1. 2. To kick at or tread on disdainfully. v. that advice, electing in many instances to use the ten-dollar word where the bargain one might do. For a Modest God, his first book published in the u.s. (two earlier, Canadian volumes are sampled in it), rings with an opulence of phrasing too rarely heard in our poetry. Ormsby's deluxe style is sure to offend those who equate polysyllables with pompousness and full-throated melody with atavism atavism (ăt`əvizəm), the appearance in an individual of a characteristic not apparent in the preceding generation. At one time it was believed that such a phenomenon was thought to be a reversion of "throwback" to a hypothetical ancestral . But for the antique rest of us, his poems afford the rare pleasure of listening to a polished yet deeply humane sensibility respond, in language of exhilarating verve, to whatever it seizes on or despairs of. Take, for instance, this passage from "Gazing at Waves": The spectacle is sovereign, yet intimate. How soon the waters enter our attention, follow us in sleep, accompany the cadence of our minds, seem punctual and seriatim, curled in all the beauty of futility, so promptly mortal as they gather in, ascend and hover in the gusting air, then amble over into hiddenness, fold themselves in sand like drowsy claws curved into the twilight of the nest. "Sovereign, yet intimate" characterizes Ormsby's tone here and throughout. Despite their pedigreed diction, his poems never strut, condescend con·de·scend intr.v. con·de·scend·ed, con·de·scend·ing, con·de·scends 1. To descend to the level of one considered inferior; lower oneself. See Synonyms at stoop1. 2. , or lapse into mandarin whims and obliquities. Quite the opposite: Ormsby always tries to shadow, like the waves, "the cadence of our minds." In this case, his parataxis par·a·tax·is n. The juxtaposition of clauses or phrases without the use of coordinating or subordinating conjunctions, as It was cold; the snows came. and gently lapping rhythms mimic not only the ocean but the ruminative ru·mi·nate v. ru·mi·nat·ed, ru·mi·nat·ing, ru·mi·nates v.intr. 1. To turn a matter over and over in the mind. 2. To chew cud. v.tr. drift its sounds touch off in us. Turning to another poem, "Rooster rooster its crowing at dawn heralds each new day. [Western Folklore: Leach, 329] See : Dawn rooster symbol of maleness. [Folklore: Binder, 85] See : Virility ," we find this chirpier bit of parrotry: I like the way the rooster lifts his feet, so jauntily exact, then droops one springy yellow claw aloft just like a tailor gathering up a pleat; and then there are those small, surprising lilts, both rollicking and staid, that grace his bishop's gait, like a waltzer on a pair of supple stilts or a Russian on parade. Ormsby has scrutinized his fowl, found a series of droll, charming similes for it, and then--trickiest of all--caught its gait in the quick, frisky frisk·y adj. frisk·i·er, frisk·i·est Energetic, lively, and playful: a frisky kitten. frisk , almost nursery-rhyme movement of these lines, so different from the meditative swells and recessions quoted above. Elsewhere, flamingos are observed to have a "billiarding/adolescent sprawl of knees" and "the silhouettes/ of parking meters," crows a "snug yarmulke," anhingas "a calisthenic cal·is·then·ics n. 1. (used with a pl. verb) Gymnastic exercises designed to develop muscular tone and promote physical well-being: finesse." Ormsby works his comic anthropomorphoses further down the food chain, too. About an ant lion's post-prandial etiquette, he notes, "There's a proprietary fussiness,/ meticulous, almost suburban, as/ the little killer scrapes his whirlpool smooth." To my taste, his animal poems are among the most delightful since Marianne Moore's. No less discerning is Ormsby's botanical attention: The random meanders of the blind wood lice cut their labyrinthine cicatrice of cryptic squiggles in soft cambium. Their carved grooves look like staves and notes of scores a cello ellipsoidally transmutes before the main theme flitters to the flutes. I feel these clear canals. My fingers parse these worm trails laid bare like epigraphy. Ormsby is a professor of Near Eastern Studies at McGill University, and it's hard not to read into lines like these a Muslim reverence for script. His whole manner of embellishment, in fact, often seems to me faintly analogous to the rippling traceries of Arabic. However hoary hoar·y adj. hoar·i·er, hoar·i·est 1. Gray or white with or as if with age. 2. Covered with grayish hair or pubescence: hoary leaves. 3. the metaphor of nature as an open book, Ormsby makes it work, so graceful is his handling of the trope. One of Ormsby's most amusing gambits is to turn his microscope--and the tables with it--on his own species. He's written a series of "body part" poems, two of them found here. First, "Fingernails," which begins, "It is the patrimony of reptiles, or of birds,/to possess such pale claws, to sport such/little flashes of keratin keratin (kĕr`ətĭn), any one of a class of fibrous protein molecules that serve as structural units for various living tissues. The keratins are the major protein components of hair, wool, nails, horn, hoofs, and the quills of feathers. at the farthest tip." As will have become apparent by now, Ormsby is obsessed ob·sess v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es v.tr. To preoccupy the mind of excessively. v.intr. with claws. Also noses: The nose is antithetical. It sniffs, snuffles, wallows in sneezes, then recoils in Roman nobility, profile-proud; pampers its fleshy shadow in bas-reliefs; or is serenely alcoved within rotundas where the chiseled light dapples its expansive flanges. Who (except perhaps Rostand) knew that noses lead such vain, complex, separate lives? Once again, I hail Ormsby's deft manipulation of sound and all it connotes, as witness the razor-fine shift, at the end of thc second line, from lowliness to hauteur hauteur machine-estimated mean fiber length in a top of wool; the basis for the pricing of tops. ; with "then recoils," the poem mock-snootily hoists its beak into the Augustan air. That Ormsby dotes on apparently unpromising objects such as lice trails, slag chunks, and his nose invites the critic to apply that treacliest, most prevalent of cliches: "the extraordinary found in the ordinary," some breathless version of which accounts for at least half the blurbs these days. But on closer inspection, his work points up just how unsatisfactory this platitude really is. For while his poems may cause us to gaze with enhanced awe at, say, our nostrils or a wood fungus, what counts--what, if anything, might be called "extraordinary"--is the nacre nacre: see mother-of-pearl. he secretes around the thing, the thing itself being no more than a sort of tailor's dummy. On some level, a bathetic ba·thet·ic adj. Characterized by bathos. See Synonyms at sentimental. [Probably blend of bathos and pathetic. relation obtains in many lyrics, and a poem like "Nose" only emphasizes the fact. Another term one often hears bruited about lately is ecphrasis. Ormsby's memorable contribution to the genre is "Finding a Portrait of the Rugby Colonists, My Ancestors Among Them," which refers to a utopian community founded in Tennessee in 1881. The poem concludes: Tell me, if you had been the God who shaped their cheekbones and their brows, the dignified alertness of their ears, their ceremonial and formal smiles, their throats the patience of a May sun mottled with its little daubs of luminance, the fingers curved on Bibles or on canes, the feet in their black-thronged propriety of dainty boots or strenuous clodhoppers, would you, for a world, have let them tumble into nothingness and seen their strong hearts rot, or would you have raised them up again, the way you rouse a sleeper or a child? This is grand and stirring poetry. Among other things, it reminds us how much momentum and authority a well-wrought sentence can accumulate. Ormsby's syntax here feels nearly sculptural: he carves a sinuous groove down the page--a mold innocent of language, waiting for words but shapely in its own right--and then fills it with locutions of mixed fragility and force, like "dainty boots or strenuous clodhoppers." Emotionally, meanwhile, he strikes a tightrope balance between the curatorial and the passionate; the result is a rich, historical pathos that stops short of sentimentality. Just as affecting are the familiar poems of Ormsby's adult life. "Blood," dedicated to his adopted sons, includes these lines: Blood relies hysterically on old school ties while our enlacements all have been made thread by thread, braid upon braid. And "History," presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. about his ex-wife, stands out for its apt austerity: This is our history. The place is empty now where we began. The rooms are full of sunlight, and the sea effaces all the traces where we ran. But when Ormsby glances back at his childhood, his focus can go soft and misty. "Rain in Childhood," "The Gossip of the Fire," and "Fragrances," to name three culprits, are too sweetly Proustian, marred by a cloying nostalgia: And sometimes I would hide in her wardrobe, standing among the dresses and the gowns as though a rush of women circled me with a smell of warm and fragrant skin.... I have a few other disgruntlements to air, the pettiest being with Ormsby's defiantly middling titles. A stiffer charge is that he sometimes gilds gilds: see guilds. his lichens Lichens Symbiotic associations of fungi (mycobionts) and photosynthetic partners (photobionts). These associations always result in a distinct morphological body termed a thallus that may adhere tightly to the substrate or be leafy, stalked, or hanging. , as it were. Having defended Ormsby's flourishes generally, I must also admit thinking that he falls at moments into a euphuism euphuism (y `fy ĭzəm), in English literature, a highly elaborate and artificial style that derived from the Euphues compounded of inkhorn ink·horn n. A small container made of horn or a similar material, formerly used to hold ink for writing. adj. Affectedly or ostentatiously learned; pedantic: inkhorn words. vocabulary and excess alliteration alliteration (əlĭt'ərā`shən), the repetition of the same starting sound in several words of a sentence. Probably the most powerful rhythmic and thematic uses of alliteration are contained in Beowulf, . In particular, his poems can reek of early Stevens: "mute communicados," "cadaverous ca·dav·er·ous adj. 1. Suggestive of death; corpselike. 2. Having a corpselike pallor. vermeils," and "blazon Venezuelas of lewd suavity" register as fulsome, overripe o·ver·ripe adj. 1. Too ripe. 2. Marked by decay or decline. o ver·ripe pastiches.
On the whole, however, Ormsby carries Stevens's mantle with rightness, ease, and Brummellian flair. The master's curlicues, minute textures, blend of boisterousness and dignity, and, above all, his ear for the inner harmonies of English: these have been passed on. Ormsby could justly adopt, for his own puffery puff·er·y n. Flattering, often exaggerated praise and publicity, especially when used for promotional purposes. Noun 1. puffery - a flattering commendation (especially when used for promotional purposes) , the boast he lends to the tenth-century Arabic poet Mutanabbi: "language flows/from my fingertips and from my quill/ the way the spider tesselates its silk." But amour-propre isn't his tendency. Rather, he resembles ... a poet who discovers a covert love affair between obstreperous syllables and then, cracking grandeur from the egg of shame, sets these diametric desperadoes in a pas de deux. We don't use language--it uses us. As Karl Kraus once said, in the days when one could safely breathe such things, "My language is the common prostitute that I turn into a virgin." Ormsby's linguistic ambition is less jealous: magnanimously to sponsor--like a Frenchman, or an easygoing god--torrid liaisons, and then to eavesdrop on them. Between two words, you must play the humble Cyrano. Ben Downing is managing editor of Parnassus: Poetry in Review. |
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