The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Hailey Leithauser on James Arthur
James Arthur, Charms Against Lightning. Copper Canyon Press, 2012.
James Arthur and the Poetry of
Introspection
All poets, as all artists, are by nature an introspective lot. There is no other personality type, no other mindset, that could spur someone on to the long, often tortuous hours hunched over a keyboard or notebook that are required to create something as gloriously non-utilitarian as a lyric poem. The difference between good and bad poetry can often be found in the nature of this introspection. Does the writer spend those hours staring at the thin veneer of the mirror, or does she probe farther, into the intricate fireworks of the mind? Is the poet simply a one-note narcissist, or is he a thinker and philosopher? Fortunately, James Arthur is the latter, a poet who, by looking inward, sees and renders visible the greater world of the human psyche. In "Charms Against Lightning," his debut collection, Arthur gives us poems of humor, fear, originality, and commonality, as well as, on occasion, a delightful fillip of the weird. Here are the opening lines of the title poem:
Against meningitis and poisoned milk, flash floods and heartwreck, against daydreams
Against losing your fingers, drinking detergent, earthquakes, baldness, divorce, against falling in love with a child . . . .
Against these talismans against lightning— the shutters swing, and clack their yellow teeth; the deep sky welters and the windows quiver A poem like this, which discovers the incipient danger in the most routine objects of everyday life, succeeds in connecting poet to reader in a world not only of shared menace, but a shared scrambling for sanctuary. The looking in becomes a reaching out to an expansive and communal reality. Arthur concerns himself with a sense of place throughout the poems, and many of them are centered on a locale—a shoreline, a swimming pool, a country, a cemetery, a kitchen. Arthur uses these places metaphorically; the settings can be a state of mind, and a state of mind in turn can become a location. For example, "Your eyelashes; there's / what I know about Anacapri" (in "Tyrrhean Sea") and "Here, sheets and hair / perfume the air, every gate is hammered silver, / every song, a song and dance, and the balloon seller / bares her ivory shoulder for a kiss" (in "Utopia"). There's a commitment to craft here, a wonderful musicality in the use of internal and half rhyme, which combined with this metaphoric perception, accomplishes the much-lauded slant, the freshness and novelty lacking in many contemplative poems. This musicality continues through the book, more notably in some poems than others, and the interspersion in places of rhymed and unrhymed poems, rhymed and unrhymed lines, creates a pacing that encourages the reader to slow down and linger, to stop and reread. For example, the poem "Vertigo," a visual poem that speaks in an unrhymed voice:
Copper geese revolving on a weather vane, searching for a tailwind,
as if they had somewhere to go . . .
Is followed by the chewier, melodic "Against Emptiness":
Denser than a dog. Volatile like a torpedo, harder than a punch line and more foreseeable.
One other inclusion that expands the range of this book is the juxtaposition, alongside the reality-based poems, of a scattering of poems which swerve off into the incredible and surreal. Poems such as "The Kitchen Weeps Onion" ("The kitchen weeps onion / because the cook is dead") or "Sad Robots":
what do they want? to be waterfalls or to give new leaf
to bend, unclench to grow a peach
I would have loved to have seen more of these fantastical poems, because their inclusion underscores that a book need not be limited thematically to one subject or atmosphere, one exploration, but can center instead on the act of exploration itself.
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