Read Green is the Orator Online
Authors: Sarah Gridley
on the rough-to-touch.
Come back
it goes
come back
.
It is late when the rummage gets underway. The air smells more
of earth than decks. Dockhands brag
to pretty bonnets, cormorants spear at wavy profits.
Now for a password
to work at all. For “walnut” to open
a single star.
I'm done with the worst of cursed and cursing.
When the wind stands me up
so I do not fall, I'll forget which psalm
works against which sin.
Lap the evening water where it blackens. Cat where I cannot see
habit the light in cells. Morning would have a river in its mouth.
Oil of the flower's every step. Never a word, neither a starâ
but blue to the end of remembering.
Up in the middle of the yard
is a fishing net being mended in good light. So that even
  the atheist's novel was a place to choose to live.
Bound together for motion in sunshine, the pages felt more
than a few lives long. Flowers orange
and joyful-yellow, but stuck in dusts
of human traffic, the jewelweed & touch-me-nots
  could release
their contents
at the slightest brush.
It is betterâit shall be better with me
because I have known you
.
Can I hope to say it
  in any case? To blossom is thoughtlessâ
so we barely leave room
for each other to blossom.
Summer: the wild carrot umbel went to seed.
Summer: the wild carrot umbel could recite
  the bird nest's negative space. I am not afraid
of the concave shape. These were our common namesâ
the names for which
we had something in common.
I borrow my book title from a line in Wallace Stevens's poem “Repetitions of a Young Captain.”
“Greeting Osiris” excerpts, used as epigraphs for section markers 1, 2, and 3, come from Normandi Ellis's translation of the Egyptian Book of the Dead:
Awakening Osiris
© 1988 used with permission of Phanes Press, an imprint of Red Wheel/Weiser, LLC
SALT MARSH, THICK WITH BEHAVIORS
The Comma landing in and flying out of the sentence “A woman should behave herself naturally” is a species of butterfly and also a punctuation mark that alters, ever so slightly, some lines borrowed from
The Philadelphia Story:
George Kittredge: | But a man expects his wife to ⦠|
Tracy Lord: | Behave herself. Naturally. |
C. K. Dexter Haven: | To behave herself naturally. [George gives him a look] |
C. K. Dexter Haven: | Sorry. |
JARDINS SOUS LA PLUIE
After one of the 1967 Ceri Richards paintings by this title.
SWEET HABIT OF THE BLOOD
I borrowed this phrase from George Eliot.
COMING TO THE FESTIVAL OF THE GOD OF BOUNDARIES
Termine, sive lapis sive es defossus in agro
stipes, ab antiquis tu quoque numen habes
.
Terminus, whether you are a stone or a stump buried in the field, from ancient days you too have been possessed of numen. (
OVID
,
Fasti
, Book 2)
Thanks to Juliana Froggatt and Richard Gridley for help with this translation.
RECESSIVE
This poem is an attempted conversation with the “Janicon” series of artist Paul Feiler.
SUNRISE WITH SEA MONSTERS
After the J. M. W. Turner painting.
THE BAD INFINITY
Written after a geological walking tour of the Lakeview Cemetery in Cleveland, Ohio.
MISCELLANY
Peter Mark Roget kept a classification notebook when he was only eight years old. One of the section headings was “Different Things” (a miscellany). This poem works with synonyms for the word
miscellany
, and with miscellaneous items from my own notebooks.
A GENERAL DISCRIMINATION OF SYNONYMS
⦠far less do I venture to thrid [
sic
] the mazes of the vast labyrinth into which I should be led by any attempt at a general discrimination of synonyms. The difficulties I have had to contend with have already been sufficiently great, without this addition to my labours. (
PETER MARK ROGET
)
ANTONYMS & INTERMEDIARIES
In many cases, two ideas which are completely opposed to each other, admit of an intermediate or neutral area, equidistant from both; all these being expressible by corresponding definite terms. (
PETER MARK ROGET
)
FIRST INSPIRATIONS OF THE NITROUS OXIDE
All the language in this pantoum is Roget's, taken verbatim from two sources: from a report he made to the Pneumatic Institute following his self-administration of the gas and (in smaller portions) from his introduction to his
Thesaurus
.
SECOND INSPIRATIONS OF THE NITROUS OXIDE
My information about Roget comes from D. L. Emblem's biography,
Peter Mark Roget: The Word and the Man
(New York: Thomas E. Crowell, 1970). This poem is for Jane Grogan, who, at age ten, made this sentence in response to grammar homework:
The musician has many guitars, but tonight he strummed his green guitar
.
DISHEVELED HOLINESS
Borrows from Whitman's “Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking” and directly quotes T. E. Huxley (aka “Darwin's Bulldog”). In his book
Coleridge's Metaphors of Being
(Princeton University Press, 1979), Edward Kessler used the phrase “disheveled holiness” to describe Coleridge's sense of divinity.
AGAINST THE THRONE AND MONARCHY OF GOD
Title taken from line 42 of Milton's
Paradise Lost
(Book 1, “The Argument”).
ACOUSMATIC
This poem is for Mark and Elizabeth.
THE ORATOR'S MAXIMAL LIKELIHOOD
In statistics, “maximal likelihood” is a method used to fit a mathematical model to data. Estimating maximal likelihood helps to tune the “free parameters” of the model to real-world data.
THE BEAUTY OF WHERE WE HAVE BEEN LIVING
This poem is for my goddaughter, Lucy (May 25, 1994âJuly 21, 2006). The title is drawn from Robert Duncan's “Salvages: An Evening Piece”:
The tide of our purpose has gone back into itself, into its own counsels. And it is the beauty of where we have been living that is the poetry of the hour
.
INTRINSIC
Only something that has no history can be defined
is taken from Nietzsche.
WORK
Homage to William Morris, author of the utopian socialist novel
News from Nowhere;
designer of the Evenlode textile pattern; and all-around good thinker: “Have nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful.”
SUMMER READING
The atheist is George Eliot. The novel (from which I quote) is
Daniel Deronda
.
I am very grateful to the journals that first published these poems, some in slightly different forms and by slightly different titles:
Â
Aufgabe: | Intimations |
 | Strokes |
Cerise Press: | Jardins sous la pluie |
 | Sweet Habit of the Blood |
Chicago Review: | A Boredom of Spirit |
 | Building Box (Atlantic) Where Hardly Hearth Exists |
Crazyhorse: | Anatomy of Listening |
 | Sunrise with Sea Monsters |
Denver Quarterly: | If It Be Not Now |
Fourteen Hills: | Arethusa |
 | Morse Gives Up Portraiture |
Gray Tape: | Gothic Tropical |
Greatcoat: | Eidothea |
 | Oratorium |
 | Recessive |
Gulf Coast: | Disheveled Holiness |
Harp & Altar: | Film in Place of a Legal Document |
 | Sending Owls to Athens |
 | Thicket Play |
jubilat: | Acousmatic |
Kenyon Review Online: | The Beauty of Where We Have Been Living |
 | Medieval Physics |
Mudlark: | Honey Ants |
 | Is He Decently Put Back Together? |
 | The Orator's Maximal Likelihood |
 | Ovation |
 | Return of the Native to the Widespread Hour |
NEO: | Against the Throne and Monarchy of God |
 | Salt Marsh, Thick with Behaviors |
 | Table of Consanguinity (The Cousin Chart) |
 | Work |
New American Writing: | The Bad Infinity |
 | Salon/Saloon |
Pool: | Intrinsic |
Slope: | Coefficient |
 | Half Seas Over |
 | Makes an Arrangement |
 | Midlander |
 | Miscellany |
 | Posthumous |
 | Sonnet on Fire |
 | Summer Reading |
The Tusculum Review: | Arrowsic |
 | Coming to the Festival of the God of Boundaries |
 | Constable of the Sweet Oblong |
 | Diminution of the Clear Thing |
“Under the Veil of Wildness” is reprinted in Camille T. Dungy et al., eds.,
From the Fishouse: An Anthology of Poems That Sing, Rhyme, Resound, Syncopate, Alliterate, and Just Plain Sound Great
(New York: Persea Books, 2009).
I want to thank my family, friends, students, and teachers. For sending me all the way from China a stamp of “gladness” (“Ru Yi”âor, “the heart's content”) with complementary bright red ink, I want to give very special thanks to Qun. Thank you for sharing this stampâand brightening its wayâso generously. Thanks also to Chris Flint, whose careful translation of passages from “The Spiritual Canticle” of St. John, though they do not ultimately appear in the book, were not for naught!
NEW CALIFORNIA POETRY
edited by | Robert Hass |
For
, by Carol Snow
Enola Gay
, by Mark Levine
Selected Poems
, by Fanny Howe
Sleeping with the Dictionary
, by Harryette Mullen
Commons
, by Myung Mi Kim
The Guns and Flags Project
, by Geoffrey G. O'Brien
Gone
, by Fanny Howe
Why/Why Not
, by Martha Ronk
A Carnage in the Lovetrees
, by Richard Greenfield
The Seventy Prepositions
, by Carol Snow
Not Even Then
, by Brian Blanchfield
Facts for Visitors
, by Srikanth Reddy
Weather Eye Open
, by Sarah Gridley
Subject
, by Laura Mullen
This Connection of Everyone with Lungs
, by Juliana Spahr
The Totality for Kids
, by Joshua Clover
The Wilds
, by Mark Levine
I Love Artists
, by Mei-mei Berssenbrugge
Harm
., by Steve Willard
Green and Gray
, by Geoffrey G. O'Brien
The Age of Huts (compleat)
, by Ron Silliman
Selected Poems, 1974â2006: it's go in horizontal
, by Leslie Scalapino
rimertown/an atlas
, by Laura Walker
Ours
, by Cole Swensen
Virgil and the Mountain Cat: Poems
, by David Lau
Sight Map: Poems
, by Brian Teare
Transcendental Studies: A Trilogy
, by Keith Waldrop
R's Boat
, by Lisa Robertson
Green is the Orator
, by Sarah Gridley
Writing the Silences
, by Richard O. Moore
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Designer | Text and Display |
Compositor | Printer |