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Relief Spreads the Love: Sarah Wells’s “Cascade Valley”

Here’s a lovely little poem from a former Relief author, Sarah Wells, called “Cascade Valley.”

Congrats, Sarah, and thanks for sharing your poem.

Beauty, Any Beauty

Poetry Editor Brad Fruhauff, pictured with flower

Brad Fruhauff

Poetry Editor Brad Fruhauff read two things about beauty today and couldn’t help but put them together.

Mark Jarman in “Tea Fire”* tells of driving toward a forest fire one evening, “seduced / like night moths,” to witness its terrible beauty. He and his unnamed, unnumbered companion(s) are in awe of the way the smoke turns silver as it passes over the moon and the way the “red body” of the fire seems to desire to follow the waves of “ashy cumulus” into the sky. Then, however, they come upon homes threatened by the fire and turn back “embarrased–”

Not moths at all
but dazzled lovers
of beauty, any beauty.

The poem works because Jarman convinces us as readers of the beauty of the fire just as the “we” of the poem saw it, but then we share, too, in the abashment of realizing that this beauty comes at the cost of people’s homes. It is immaterial whether the homes are the extravagant vacation cottages of the wealthy which, when we hear of them, we often want to think were extraneous and expendable anyways; for Jarman, they are still homes – “doomed homes,” in fact. The valence of the poem is that the dazzling beauty of the fire momentarily dislocated the speaker from the heaviness of this world of responsibility and care.

“Not moths at all” could be read as “not drawn to the fire by a morbid fascination with death – our own or others,” for it is the threat of destruction by fire that embarrasses the travelers. But “dazzled lovers” does seem to suggest that their difference from moths is not in their volition but in the object. They are drawn by beauty rather than destruction, but they are drawn just the same. As “lovers,” they exist in a timeless, even exclusive state – the state of early passion familiar from our adolescence that, we must admit, while pleasant is not without blame. Yet the poem affirms that what they pursued was, indeed beauty – any beauty, beauty wherever it can be found when it is so rare a thing.

I’ve been thinking about beauty ever since I started studying the sublime. Beauty is often figured as the pacific, angelic counterpart to the dark, excessive sublime – roughly the attributes of Blake’s Heaven and Hell, respectively. Suffice to say that Hell and the sublime are quite chic these days, while beauty is trite at best (think Snow White) and dangerous at worst (something like her wicked step-mother). Classical beauty, after all, entailed an ability of the viewer to perceive it adequately, which we nowadays recognize as the road to violence.

Enter David Bentley Hart’s The Beauty of the Infinite: The Aesthetics of Christian Truth (Eerdmans, 2003). There are a number of bold and counterintuitive aspects to this title, but suffice to say Hart does not find beauty violent or trite. Instead, he attributes to beauty a “gratuity” and a “prodigality” that gives of itself – sometimes in startling and disturbing ways: “a village ravaged by pestilence may lie in the shadow of a magnificent mountain ridge . . . ; Cambodian killing fields were often lushly flowered.” Beauty is saved from the violence of abstraction precisely by its particularity, its inherence in just such a arrangement of things. Christian beauty, he argues, inheres in the unavoidable and often offensive narratives of the gospels; most centrally, of course, in the life, death, and resurrection of Christ.

In “Tea Fire” Jarman registers our modern ambivalence about beauty – something we’re drawn to but also embarrassed about. It’s a tension also present in “The Heronry.” Seeking the solace of a forest preserve, he reflects on his own processes as he sits quietly observing a pond and its many birds. Among his many reflections are these final ones, which I hope I’m okay in quoting at length:

I almost think I could write about it forever,
Adding word to word like coral in a reef,
An excess of language like the genetic code, an extravagance like all the stars,
Too much ever to be needed except
By the need for there always to be more,
That need which, when the end comes, looks past it
For woods and hills and ocean,
For fields and streets and houses and horizon,
Repelled by blankness, expecting beyond sleep
The dream country and its population.

Here he finds himself caught between beauty, language, and desire. Is his experience a projection of his own need “for there always to be something more”? (And if so, what?) Or does it inhere, as Hart would argue, somehow in the world itself, if not in any precise way? Or is it a function of language, words that spring up in the mind as a coral reef?

Jarman’s poems may lack the confidence that faith ostensibly offers, but they are nonetheless compelling meditations on beauty because they are full of the desire that faith, in many ways, is – desire for there to be more than what is given and at the same time desire for the given to be “given,” as a gift, as what is not labored for or dubiously “earned.” Sometimes the challenge for the (American) Christian is to clear away the screen of faith to see – really see – the manifestations of glory that so many have pointed us toward without knowing their name.

* Jarman’s poems can be found in the Autumn 2010 edition of The Hudson Review.

Poetry Games

Can poetry be fun? Um… you do read Relief, right? Check out this post about Tweet Speak Poetry from the Books & Culture online newsletter.

Poetry being Poetry in 4.2

Poetry Editor Brad Fruhauff, pictured with flower

Brad Fruhauff

Poetry Editor Brad Fruhauff offers a preview of the poetry for issue 4.2.

And though the two became separated, they were
forever linked, like the rocking chair and the wind.

- Robert Jonte, “Elegy” (forthcoming in issue 4.2)

Owen Barfield, one of the lesser-known Inklings, believed that language began in metaphor, diversified to become more precise, and would then gradually return, with a new self-consciousness, to the rich imprecision of metaphor. I can’t remember if it was Dana Gioia or Billy Collins who said that we would stop writing poetry when everything had been compared to everything else, but the point remains that poetry, whatever else it is, is certainly the art of the rich imprecision of metaphor, freeing words from the fetishization of the material into the concrete play of the imagination. Through metaphor and other kinds of figuration, poetry names things that are so particular they require more than any one word can handle, and yet the names bear no more nor less necessary relation to the things than the wind to the rocking chair in Jonte’s lines above.

Much of the poetry for Relief 4.2 performs this figurative naming – not only through the juxtapositions of metaphor but also through the continuities of metonymy and even narrative. The poets in this issue aren’t satisfied with the distances, as though postmodern irony were the best we can hope for. They seek to inhabit gaps and silences, like Kolby Kerr imagining Cain, having just murdered his brother, suddenly “never so certain of flesh,” or Sarah Gajowski-Hill, on the phone with a friend 3600 miles away when the conversation turns serious, considering what’s “a good distance to contemplate hyperbole and true affection versus basic nostalgia.”

One thing I appreciate about this brand of imaginative inhabiting is that it depends on a faith in the spiritual value of imagination but does not depend on a romanticization of that faith. David Holper, visiting concentration camps in Germany, reflects on the sacrificial act of one Father Kolbe, whose death didn’t stop the war or redeem the evil of the camp, but was not therefore meaningless:

Having stood in the room where Father Kolbe died,
I can say with some certainty
that if there is one truth for the human heart
to hold, it’s that even in the hell that we would make
of the world, there is always choice in how we live.

And Judy Lorenzen reflects on the act of naming itself in a poem that confesses to falling for “the serpent’s semantics,” which obscure truth by covering it with a false name. These are poems that take seriously the responsibility of “being poetry.”

What this amounts to for me is (what I hope is true for all the poems we print) a poetry that is engaged, concrete, relevant, personal, social, political, metaphysical, spiritual – and, above all else, accessible, a poetry that speaks to use in language that may not always be easy to hear but that gives us a momentary sense that the world is as rich as we long for it to be.

Brad Fruhauff is Poetry Editor for Relief. He teaches English at Loyola University Chicago and Harper College. He lives with his wife and son in Evanston, IL.

Poetry @ catapult magazine

At Calvin’s Festival this year we had a chance to meet the kind folks over at catapult magazine, and their recent issue features a poem by Relief‘s own poetry editor, Brad Fruhauff. Take a few minutes to check out these fellow travelers.

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