Dean Young, Elegy on Toy Piano (University of Pittsburgh Press,
2005),
pbk, 93pp., $12.95.
In a recent review from The
New Criterion, the poet/critic William Logan associates Dean Young with what he calls
the School of Goofball Poetics. Although
Logans term is meant to be more dismissive than appreciative, many fans of Young
take pleasure in his poetry precisely because of Youngs style of goofy and
incongruous humor. In his sixth full-length
collection, Elegy on Toy Piano, the follow-up to
Skid (a finalist for the 2003 Lenore Marshall
Prize), Young continues to pepper his poems with smart-aleck antics. Such antics include, but are not limited to: odd
and arcane diction (Much fisticuffs in the penetralium); the deliberate mixing
of high art and pop culture (I cant get back to the old country / of the great
works of Western Art / restored to the luminosity of Loony Tunes); the parodying of
familiar poetryin this case, lines from Robert Frosts Mending Wall
(Something there is that does not love / a construction of roller coasters);
the parodying of familiar poetic techniques (So now Im supposed to explode
syntax?); inane rhymes (Think long before throwing anything away. / The
Buddhists have satellite for the NBA); old fashioned slapstick (Mung magph
naagh, replies the heroine / still in her gag); and wry self-commentary (After
a while it sounds the same. / Saaaaaaammmmme).
Does Youngs poetry indeed sound the same?
Is it merely a monotony of wisecracks and one-liners, however witty the wisecracks
may be? His range, to be sure, is not as
commanding as that of his New York School predecessors; his humor is not as surprising or
endearing as, say, John Ashberys, and his sincerity is not nearly as powerful (cf.
Ashberys Houseboat Days). Young, however, can do more than just goof around
and his intention to engage the elegiac as well as the lighthearted is well demonstrated
in the books title poem, an elegy for the late Kenneth Koch. There are perhaps one or two false notes in the
poem, but the first and last stanzas are tonally perfect.
Both have the aphoristic quality of genuine wisdom:
You dont need a pony
to connect you to the unseeable
or an airplane to connect you to the sky.
When something becomes ash,
theres nothing you can do to turn it back.
About this, even diamonds do not lie.
Despite the
fact that Young borrows many of his techniques from the historical avant-garde, such as
the nonsense of Dada and the jarring juxtapositions of Surrealism, his poems are, in many
ways, conventional, and deal with common lyric topoi
such as love, mortality, and the passage of time. His
poems poke fun at poetic conventions but never reject the conventions of mainstream poetry
altogether. Every so often, he allows a
well-turned trope or simile:
We were inseparable
like two sides of a page on which was written
an argument against dust,
how everything becomes it.
One could say that Youngs book, as
a whole, is an argument against dust and an acknowledgement of how dust triumphs over
everythingeven diamonds.
In the face of
dust and death, a heightened attention to the present, to ongoingness, offers a powerful
solace for the livingelegies, after all, are for the living, not the deadand
ongoingness is exactly what Young tries to capture in his poems. Frank OHaras A Step Away from
Them, a poem that meditates on both the dizzying vibrancy of New York City during
OHaras lunch hour and the death of his friends Bunny, John Latouche, and
Jackson Pollock, is no doubt a model for Youngs poetics of ongoingness. Its rhetorical questionBut is the / earth as full as life was full, of
them?is a resonant echo behind many of Youngs rhetorical questions that
contemplate both death and transience:
Will we never see our dead friends again?
(Thrown As If Fierce & Wild)
And how to get at the fullness of
life,
its quivering and rush
first with blunt scissors
then symbolic notation?
(Fire is Speaking)
What can surpass the bounty of this
moment?
(Shield of Moon Dust)
Because of his interest in ongoingness,
Young values speed and current, which are both ways of keeping up with,
as he calls it in Skid, times winged
whatchamacallit. They are also ways of
handling the heterogeneous matter of his poetry, as he explains in the contributors
notes to The Best American Poetry 2001: [In Sources
of the Delaware,] I was trying to get a bunch of rather disparate material to fly in
some kind of formation, weird art-world events, pseudo-myth, something Id written
about a phone conversation with a friend. What seemed to be wanted to hold this stuff
together for me on the page was a sense of current, of unavoidable and unopposable forward
flood. So of course it turned into a love poem.
At their
best, Youngs poems gain momentum despite their off-kilter errancylike
snowballs that, however much they zig and zag, accumulate force and mass as they go. For this reason, Young excels at longer, more
capacious poems such as Skids 123-lined
Whale Watch or Elegys
True/False, a list of 100 true/false statements.
The latter begins:
1. Usually my first answer is
correct.
2. I want to break things.
3. I hear voices.
4. I am good at following orders.
5. I like jury duty.
Number 66the longest entry
in this listgets at one of the cruxes of Youngs poetics: The meaning of
every word comes from context and whereas context is created by other words, meaning can
never be fixed but you can cross a stream on loose, slippery rocks without getting wet by
keeping a strong, forward momentum. Momentum,
Young would probably say, brings one into the bounty of the moment. The bridge of loose, slippery rocks here offers a
tempting metaphor for a typical Dean Young poemthe stream being the very
quivering and rush of language itself. One
can nimbly traverse the apparent meaninglessness of a poems parts like
Its eschatology kegger night or Flinchclatter dovespun
sundrove or My tetrahedron is a chiseled meltdown, / my tv listing as
long as one keeps reading at a brisk pace without any irritable
reaching after fact and reason. Yet one
can also read a Young poem slowly as well, taking more time to examine the strange
textures of the various rocks. Take this one
for instance: Tangential to the chewy nougat, the caramel. Or this one: Roses are blue, the quality of
mercy / in chow mein, first thought butt-shake.
Where exactly such a bridge would lead is another matter altogether.
One of the strongest poems of the collection is also one of the shortest. In the impressionistic Flamenco, Young
explores the anguished sublime of Federico Garcia Lorcas duende. There
is a certain Rilkean compression here (see Rilkes Spanische Tänzerin)
that is far different than the casual looseness of True/False. Here is the poem in toto:
Sad song, thousand-mile voice,
the crows throwing their existential
shadows about.
About what?
Sad song little while.
Little wheel.
So the red petticoat flashes.
The singer claps.
O love of my life, our flesh
is pulled away no matter.
Foot slam.
How we try.
Foot slam.
To hold each other in our mouths.
So now we can see better the forever part?
Moon statuary.
Stones
stacked up to mark a pass.
Outer
space
teething through the night.
In a poem with such sharp and rapid
movementsthe hand clap, the foot stamp, and the bright flash of petticoatthe
word teething in the final line is utterly surprising. It radically retards the movement of the poem at a
place where one would expect hurtling
through the night or rushing through
the night. The word play of little
while/little wheel, the pun of our flesh / is pulled away no
matter, and the performative spondee of Foot slam, represents
Youngs verbal alchemy at its most intense. In
this book Ive tried to embrace the duplicity of feeling, the malleability of
perception, says Young. Flamenco displays exactly this kind of duplicity
even in its very first linethe song may be sad, but it is sung with the exuberance
of a thousand miles.
Michael C. Leong
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