Given sugar, given salt, what will we do? What will you do? What will I do? Have we not already been given the sweet, the more complicated, invigorating salt? Who chooses one over the other, and why contrast these two, and not the bitter and the sweet? There is a song by River City Extension called Something Salty, Something Sweet which is about, well, sex of course, but Hirshfield is after something else. She is again illuminating simple objects like leather, rocks, vaccines, ants, a button, pillows as in ‘Come, Thief’ which I liked, but these were written in 2001, 10 years before the other, and I can tell. My heart and mind definitely weren’t called to like Mr. Garrison Keillor wisely suggested poetry should be able to do and be.
The cover photo bothers me, more than I yet understand: a still life of moldy fruit complicated by a rat and cockroach by Georg Flegel. I had to look at the opened book on my table as I tried to eat mindfully, and it was the bitter to the sweet I was trying to find in spring fresh ripe pears and blueberries and raw nuts and seeds, and might have ruined the poems for me. I get it, it’s a Annie Dillard theme that I absolutely understand: there is death in the mix, a thousand ways beauty is eclipsed by decay, rot, ugliness.
So many of the poems might be more considered the bitter rather than the salty compared to the sweet. I am not sure how the cockroach can be considered salty, which to me, means adding zest, spice, intricacy, earthiness. Dimension, flavor. Not all good, sometimes too much salt stings. But the salt is of earth, of the ocean, of our bodies, tears, sweat. The cockroach is just gross.
But here’s what I tend to do when given salty, when given sweet, when given bitter:
find the beauty.
Lines:
There are openings in our lives/of which we know nothing. (the envoy, about a rat and a snake)
Does a poem enlarge the world/or only our idea of the world?//How do you take one from the other,/I lied, or did not lie,/in answer. (mathematics)
It is foolish/ to let a young redwood/ grow next to a house.//Even in this lifetime, you will have to choose. (tree)
There is no substance /that does not carry one inside it,/hands spinning/as the Fates were said to do. (clock)
Some stories last many centuries,/others only a moment./All alter over that lifetime like beach-glass,/grow distant and more beautiful with salt.
There is a stage in us where each being, each thing, is a mirror.
I would like not minding, whatever travels my heart./To follow it all the way into leaf-form, bark-furl, root-touch, /and then keep walking, unimaginably further.
(metempsychosis)
Poems:
Rebus
You work with what you are given,
the red clay of grief,
the black clay of stubbornness going on after.
Clay that tastes of care or carelessness,
clay that smells of the bottoms of rivers or dust.
Each thought is a life you have lived or failed to live,
each word is a dish you have eaten or left on the table.
There are honeys so bitter
no one would willingly choose to take them.
The clay takes them: honey of weariness, honey of vanity,
honey of cruelty, fear.
This rebus - slip and stubbornness,
bottom of river, my own consumed life -
when will I learn to read it
plainly, slowly, uncolored by hope or desire?
Not to understand it, only to see.
As water given sugar sweetens, given salt grows salty,
we become our choices.
Each yes, each no continues,
this one a ladder, that one an anvil or cup.
The ladder leans into its darkness.
The anvil leans into its silence.
The cup sits empty.
How can I enter this question the clay has asked?
Poem With Two Endings
Say “death” and the whole room freezes–
even the couches stop moving,
even the lamps.
Like a squirrel suddenly aware it is being looked at.
Say the word continuously,
and things begin to go forward.
Your life takes on
the jerky texture of an old film strip.
Continue saying it, hold it moment after moment inside the mouth,
it becomes another syllable.
A shopping mall swirls around the corpse of a beetle.
Death is voracious, it swallows all the living.
Life is voracious, it swallows all the dead.
neither is ever satisfied, neither is ever filled,
each swallows and swallows the world.
The grip of life is as strong as the grip of death.
(but the vanished, the vanished beloved, o where?)