Book Reviews

David Rigsbee: “Still Cool – Re-reading Kizer’s Collected

Kizer CollectedCool, Calm & Collected: Poems 1960-2000
Carolyn Kizer
Copper Canyon Press, 2001

When Kizer’s Cool, Calm and Collected: Poems 1960–2000 (Copper Canyon Press, 2001) weighed in at a whopping 400 pages, readers were surprised both at the prolixity and the heft. Organized by decade rather than by publication, Kizer’s book seemed a recognition of the formal unfolding and elemental power of chronological narrative, and was in effect a wager that the justice of time transcended time’s erosions. Against the calm suggestiveness of classical entablature, framing the caryatids of her youth, there now stands, thanks to the block layout of contents, five decades worth of work, in which spin the demotic rush of particulars, of facts. As if in answer to Robert Lowell, who once wondered why invention had to be seated ahead of “what happened,” the march of poems in Kizer’s Collected alternates between lyric and narrative (with the latter seeming to take up more space in later years), dramatizing the most recognizable dynamic in her poems: the actual, remembered past confronts the idealization of event that yearns to transform fact into myth— which is to say, to remove it from history, from narrative—away from further imperfection.

The straightforward chronological arrangement  demonstrates not only the evolved contours of a career that moved from the 1950s’ neo- Metaphysical formality aĚ€ la Roethke, Kunitz, Adams, Bogan, et al., through a depressurized period of Chinese impersonations, which we may interpret also as a declaration of independence from east coast aesthetic expectations (back when such distinctions still mattered), to a stretch typified by the brilliant, bipartisan conspiracy of formal achievement and organic, open poetry. Kizer’s Collected also reveals an evidentiary dimension impossible to ignore. We find no dry periods, no queer gaps requiring explanation: the days and years, grinding as they can be, awful as they may seem through history’s lens, made memorable, forward-thinking poems possible, not—as was too often the case for her peers—impossible, or scarce.

In every decade, there are poems aware of the fault-lines worn by their occasions, passionate alike in love and denunciation, never merely witty when they can be hilarious, never sad when they can be heartbreaking, Olympian, or self-justifying. Intuition knows that ends and beginnings touch, although self-divergence, as Elizabeth Bishop told us, paradoxically mediates such wholeness as it may be our lot to achieve. Wittgenstein likened human life to a rope: although no individual strand goes all the way through, the rope is continuous. What is continuous in Kizer are the conditions for lyric expression, combined with the sense of poetry as a discipline whose longed-for outcome is the union of image and voice underwritten by occasion.

In her work, beauty is not suspect, and this also means that evil (as cruelty, neglect, or despair) is real. Over nearly fifty years her impressive consistency has maintained a realization that voice both chants and enchants. As the lover admonishes in one of her admirable Chinese “imitations” (“Summer Near the River”):

++++++++++++… Come, tease me a little!
With such cold passion, so little teasing play,
How long can we endure our life together?

Keyed to a different register, the same voice—tender, teasing, in-the-know, colloquial—can also sing an ordinary ending into being, as in “Exodus”:

We are coming down the pike,
All of us, in no particular order.
Not grouped by age, Wanda and Val, her fourth husband,
Sallie Swift, the fellows who play bridge
Every Thursday, at Mason’s Grill, in the back,
Two of them named George.
We are all coming down the pike.

Reading the early formal poems for many years now, I have always been struck by the fineness of the inlay—not only a reflection of the artisan’s pride in construction and line, but of the subtler and, at present very much out- of-fashion notion of “finish.” This is the stylistic closure that implies not fidelity to a mimetic ideology, but in Nelson Goodman’s sense, a “world-making.” In other words, poem-making is not situated among occasions ready-made for recording; rather, it is represented as invention.

Robert Lowell called attention to a similar distinction in the 1970s and registered his anxiety not only that invention (world-making) was hard, but that simple mimetic acts—descriptions, say, of facts and states of affairs—might be beyond his—or anyone’s—grasp. As a poet, Kizer has been blessedly free of such anxiety, and this confidence in the power of words to stay where they’ve been put gives her literary production a sense that authorship and authority are not simply cognates but synonyms.

In this, she is perhaps less postmodern than she fears. While feminism too began to drift into layers of ambiguity and self-consciousness, what set Kizer’s poems apart was their allegiance to an old, and if possible, even older-than- thou way of saying things that seemed essentially new. Kizer gravitated to the work of like-minded old-schoolsters like Louise Bogan, Leonie Adams, Rolfe Humphries, and Ruth Pitter, and set her allegiance there before she ever took up with the likes of Robert Creeley and Denise Levertov. This fact both predates her feminism and, when it emerges, keeps it from becoming ensnared in its own curlicues—which has been the fate of both feminism and American poetry itself, when left to the ironic patronage of the academy.

While she began to develop a reputation in the 1950s as a poet of high promise, it was the appearance of (what eventually came to be) a work- in-progress, the (then) satirical “Pro Femina” that announced an agenda both playfully subversive of earnestness and subversively in earnest toward the pieties. However, the connection of “Pro Femina” with the poet’s first volume, The Ungrateful Garden, is so profound that one wonders at its inclusion among the Chinese brushwork of the next volume, Knock Upon Silence, a fact that only the chronology of composition can explain. The precursor and companion poem to “Pro Femina” from the first book is the great “A Muse of Water.” In that poem, woman is a shape-shifter connected magically, metonymically, with water, while the “march” of civilization unfolds its stiff-jointed diorama. The point is that insofar as civilization is a march, it can’t be much of a civilization: the excluded half is precisely that which doesn’t march, but flows freely. It can be “harnessed” to man’s needs, but such a need to control can’t escape a certain whiff of perversion:

And yet these buccaneers still kneel
Trembling at the water’s verge:
“Cool River-Goddess, sweet ravine,
Spirit of pool and shade, inspire!”
So he needs poultice for his flesh,
So he needs water for his fire.

The last poem in her collected, “The Erotic Philosophers,” the poem that now concludes “Pro Femina” and, effectively, her active career as a poet, is a rereading of St. Augustine and Kierkegaard, twin pillars of patriarchal rectitude who locate what will become the Western master’s (i.e., the male’s) self-important dysfunctions in the ambivalence toward sexuality and women. Here Kizer locates the ground-zero of feminism in this same ambivalence. But the stentorian clatter of the earlier revision of Juvenal (the opening section of “Pro Femina”) is superseded by a more bemused I-told-you-so that is notable for its tolerance, as the earlier was enjoyed for its scorn:

+++++++++++++++++++… We women,
Outside, breathing dust, are still the Other.
The evening sun goes down; time to fix dinner.
“ You women have no major philosophers. ” We know.
But we remain philosophic, and say with the Saint,
“Let me enter my chamber and sing my songs of love.”

Now we see (and the chronological template reinforces) the possibility that “Pro Femina” may be profitably read not as a single poem (although the poet calls it that: “a poem”) but as a series of poems related by theme and refined by an evolving dialectic of resistance and homage. “The Erotic Philosophers,” we learn, is in part an affectionately ironic tribute to Kizer’s philosophy teacher at Sarah Lawrence, Charles Trinkhaus. And so the dialectic, like the muse
of water, shifts in turn from satire to narrative to meditation.

The distance from there to here may be charted by innumerable graphs, but none is more telling than the graph that discloses a poet’s willingness to mill privacy into public discourse while managing to retain its affective skin. Many of Kizer’s best poems go back to biography and emerge as situated memories, memoiristic descriptions leading inescapably to judgment, with a number leading—as with her poem of seeing (and being seen by) Professor Einstein ( “ Twelve O’Clock”)—to spots of time pure enough to suit Wordsworth. Nor did the increasing forays into memoir and—inevitably—elegy spell a loss of rhetorical muscle-tone. T hat outer coat for which she has been praised was still being worked until the last published work, though the application is more relaxed, more settled and timed by event and recollection than predestined by form. And there is at every turn that beautifully controlled (and controlling) vernacular.

Kizer once characterized the (male) Western poet’s obsession with elegy as an implicit necrophilia. Preferring the chronicles of friendship by which Chinese poetry holds, as it were, a mirror to the West’s infatuation with absence, the years since the 1960s and her poetry’s purifying journey into chinoiserie helped to reinvent for her elegy’s utility, as gathering shades took their place in the larger chorus: teacher, lovers, parents, other poets and friends from time immemorial become the subject of elegiac treatment. One of my favorites for the 1980s is the poem “Gerda,” which fixes and so in part restores the memory of a beloved Swedish maid and nurse, banished by her parents during the Depression, whom the desolate child can restore only through linguistic conduits years later in another language—English. It is but another step to see elegy as a cover for self-elegy, as in the recent “Trio,” where the poet’s name rhymes with the very singing it has every hope of becoming:

Some say sorrow fades.
I shall carry my sorrow forever
After I smile farewell
To those who led me here.
Only joy endures.

I pace the days along,
Three shadows follow after:
Two who were tall and fair
Are caroling behind,
And a third, who had no song.

As I argue in my book on Joseph Brodsky, translations are honorific elegies by virtue of the attention they direct to the absent poem, the poem “under” translation. In Kizer’s case, translation also becomes a means of engaging the political imagination, which in other poems is often left to hang fire, though its passive absence is often felt. Indeed, because her social commitments are seldom at variance with her deeper desires (they often are her deeper desires), her political poems are some of the best instances of this kind of poem, notoriously (for Americans) vexed and tainted by the very idealism that gives it character. The early, anti-McCarthian “The Death of a Public Servant” still threatens to make Jeremiah re-materialize after all the elegiac consolations have grown remote: “A poet, to whom no one cruel or imposing listens,/ Disdained by senates, whispers to your dust.”

Since the start of her career, Kizer has made no secret of her foundational opinions and bona fides. Looking back at her history, you notice the poems to her father, a prominent lawyer from Spokane, who overlooked the comforts of provinciality in favor of an old- fashioned insistence on the reality of art and one’s duty to be politically forward- thinking. There you also find her mother, the first Ph.D. in her state (in biology), and Kizer herself the late and only child of this enlightened couple, who gave her a sense of self-possession and reared her to believe herself capable of orienting her imagination in terms of horizons unavailable to others her age. Who but an artist could incorporate such a congeries and keep course, let alone a straight face? Reading the old poems, I have been moved by the force of their elemental rightness, their intricate solidity, hilarity, savoir-dire, existential coherence, and joy in the face of every challenge to the persistence of these qualities (challenges that are often the subjects of the poems themselves). Rereading Kizer, I have been struck by how every deployment of theme invites variation so that an outward-facing, yet self-referential figure begins to emerge with a force resembling logic. This is something you don’t see enough of: poetic logic, played out over the course of a career.

But it must be said, too, that the work of a lifetime—a poet’s collected poems—can inspire ambivalence both in the reader and in the poet herself. On the one hand, there is the understandable urge to sum up, to take the measure of time, which otherwise takes the measure of us. The same urge may occasion regret in the reader: when we approach an aggregate, aesthetic whole—an oeuvre—the figure that this work makes may lose its mystique to the need to be comprehended. Since her debut in the 1950s, Carolyn Kizer has moved at a pace that seems in retrospect the inevitable andante, from presence to eminence, through the decades, but with this gradus comes the danger that one’s reception will grow less amenable to criticism and gravitate more toward blind reverence—or worse, forgetting.

Nevertheless, there is a utility to a volume like this: it trains us to stay on point, not to be dazzled by reputation, but rather, as she puts it in “Pro Femina,” encourages us to “get back to the meeting.” Which means, more broadly, that the limited aesthetic wholes we call poems, for all their fit- and-finish, formal rectitude, sensuous satisfaction, and thematic closure, invite us to consider deeper involvements beyond pure contemplation. Unconvinced by the didactic, yet not content to be merely personal, Kizer’s work connects the dots between private and public dreaming by suggesting that private utterance can only derive authority through public ears and the mediation of cultural memory. For her, Herzen’s famous “ What is to be done? ” is not rhetorical.

David Rigsbee is the author of The Red Tower: New & Selected Poems (NewSouth Books, 2010) and The Pilot House (Black Lawrence Press, 2011). In 1990, he edited the first critical book on Kizer’s poetry, An Answering Music: On the Poetry of Carolyn Kizer (Ford Brown & Co.).

This review appeared originally in the Spring & Summer 2011 print edition of Poetry Northwest.