JIM LEFTWICH Engages
The Gnat’s Window by John M. Bennett
(Luna Bisonte
Productions, 2012)
Some
of these poems can be seen and read in the online magazine Otoliths, edited by
Mark Young, Issue 23, published on November 1, 2011. A note on the copyright page
tells us that some of the poems in this book appeared in a TLP entitled The Televisions. For now I will think of
the shape of these poems in relation to that title: the tv screen as a form,
within which we can insert and upon we we can impose the mutagenic form of the
poem, to perform a kind of anti-televisionist function in our increasingly
screen-saturated culture.
The
two poems on the first page (page 3) are horizontal rectangles with an empty space
in the center which hosts a single word. The first two lines run from left
margin to right margin and function as a frame at the top of the
"television". The last two lines also run from left margin to right
margin and function as a frame at the bottom of the "television".
Lines three, four and five have two words each, one of which is left-aligned,
and the other of which is right-aligned. The three words down the left margin
function as the left frame for the "television". The three words on
the right margin function as the right frame. The emptiness in the center is
the screen. In the center of the screen is a single word, which functions as
the title for the poem.
I
read the poem left to right, top to bottom, not expecting it to make any normal
sort of sense. There is a rhyme-scheme here, for those of you keeping score at
home:
A , A , B , A , C , A , C
It
is the Keatsian sonnet pattern, truncated and shuffled twice.* I read lines one
and two, left to right, zigzagging from line to line:
my rug rabbit yanks the coffee
shadow squirming in your pantry
becomes
my shadow rug squirming rabbit
in yanks your the pantry coffee
I do the same with the last two lines:
sticking on that can of stew the
think chunks beef sunk in brine
becomes
sticking think on chunks that
beef
can sunk of in stew brine the
The
rhyme-scheme is now:
A , B , C , B , D , B , B
I
read an X, top-left to bottom-right, then bottom-left to top-right:
my shadow water the brine
think sticking water pantry
coffee
and
then continue with the same pattern:
forks water dime
mud water clocks
dust water leaks
A
blurb at the books dot google site offers this succinct clarification: Poetry.
THE GNAT'S WINDOW consists of textual-visual poems, based on the form of a
window with words in it hovering over a mantric text-block. Highly innovative
poetry that can be read in many directions at once.
The
same page also gives us the following succulent misinformation: About the
author (2012). He is a Professor, Department of Construction Management &
Engineering, The University of Reading.
(Or, alternatively, where these
alternative facts happen to be the real ones, he is the retired Founding
Curator of the Avant Writing Collection in The Rare Books and Manuscripts
Archives at The Ohio State University.)
The
second poem on the first page is in the same form as the first. The
rhyme-scheme is:
A ,B , C , A , D , B , A
I
don't presume to know your humble opinions, my dear comrades in reading, but to
my taste these rhyme-schemes are vast improvements upon the traditions of the
practice. End rhymes are aids to memory, of course, and once upon a time they
were effective for that purpose, but we have books now, and have had them for
quite some time, so the need for end rhymes as mnemonic devices is no longer as
necessary as it once seemed. If anyone wishes to read or perform a poem aloud,
they need only to have with them a copy of the book in which the poem appears.
I have seen many poets, including John M. Bennett, accomplish this -- many
times! It is an elegant solution to an ancient problem. And any form of printed
matter will do, it doesn't
have
to be a book. End rhymes now, if we choose to use them at all, will work to accentuate
the play of music across the surface of the poem. Beyond that, the music
affects how the mind processes what is being read, culling from a scatter of
sounds and senses to create clusters for our consideration, compiling
correspondences, occult pathways via improbable connectivities in a shifting
and sifting consciousness.
I
recall that John Milton, writing in his introduction to the 1674 Revised and
Augmented version of Paradise Lost,
rejected "the jingling sound of like endings" for being "triveal,
and of no true musical delight". At this late date, the irregularity of
rhyme patterns, the unexpectedness of their appearance, is one of the few
remaining pleasures to be had from the practice.
Rhymes
in recent memory are mainly of the internal, slant and eye varieties. In
contemporary practices conversant with Blasterian hacking and homeophonic
translation rhymes are as often as not recombinative, ludic, excessive,
cesspoolish, fishy, improvisational, salvific, binocular or ludicrous. We
embrace this road of excess happily immersed in its mix of metaphors.
The
second poem on page 3 is entitled "loot". The first two lines, read
left to right, top to bottom, are as follows:
your plastic duck spins down the
garbage grinder guess which eye
which,
when read in the left to right zigzag pattern, results in this:
your garbage plastic grinder
duck
guess spins which down eye the
in
X-pattern:
your garbage loot tires gasoline
and my loot eye the
is loot lost
through loot left
right loot squeaky
in
which the rhyme-scheme is:
A , A , B , C , A
As
the book progresses the poems become increasingly complex. Many of the poems
towards the beginning of the book have seven lines, like the two on page 3,
described above. On page 7 there is a 9-line version (2 full lines, followed by
5 2-word lines -- with the title word in the center
of
the middle line, making it a 3-word line -- and ending with 2 more full lines).
On page 8 we find the first 11-line version of the form ( 3 -- 5 -- 3, rather
than 2 -- 5 -- 2).
On page 9 the first extreme mutation of the form appears, in
which there is no space at all, anywhere.
hamsterradishhamsterradishhamster
rradishhamsterradishhamsterradishh
hamsterradishhamsterradishhamster
rradishhamster faucet hamsterradishh
hamsterradishhamsterradishhamster
rradishhamsterradishhamsterradishh
hamsterradishhamsterradishhamster
monkey
If
the open-center forms are "televisions", then these hermetically
sealed text-blocks must be the gnat's windows. In a poem as tightly formed as
this "hamsterradish" (or "faucet monkey") evidence of the
tiniest of decisions stands out in an underscored beauty. Once the uniform
line-length is established by the first line, that length must be equaled by
the second line, so an extra 'r' is added at the beginning and an extra 'h' is
added at the end. If you are the kind of reader who finds beauty in the shapes
of letters, then you will appreciate how this second line is shaped. The word
radish has six letters. The word hamster has seven. The word faucet has six
letters, as does the word monkey. You will notice, though, that while the word
faucet takes up the same amount of space as the word radish, the word monkey
occupies the same length of em spaces as does the word hamster. The bold face
of the words faucet and monkey has barely any discernible effect on this.
So,
what is this? Is it a sound poem, a score for a sound poem? Certainly. I can
hear Bennett's voice intoning/chewing these sounds as I write this. Is it also
a visual poem? Absolutely. And what we read, when we are reading it -- as a
textual poem, as letterstrings, sequences of letters -- are the relationships
of the shapes, and the space each shape inhabits. Those are the semic elements
of the poem, and they are very similar to the gestural and letteral semic
shapes and spaces found in handwriting, in calligraphy, and in
quasi-calligraphic drawing.
On
page 17 we find a 12-line version of the "television" form (3 -- 5 --
3, plus another 2-word line at the bottom).
On page 23 we find a variation on
the 12-line version of the form, in which the final line is one word, broken
into two words (in this instance: door, written as "do" at the left
margin and "or" at the right).
On
page 24 is yet another variation on the 12-line version, with the final line
written as a single word spread across the page (in this case roof, with the
'r' against the left margin, the 'f' against the right margin, and the 'oo' in
the center).
On
page 35 we encounter a quantum leap in quantity and complexity in the form. Now
it has 14 lines. The top two lines are full, the third is partial, i.e.,
gue y tenedor sh ape glistens
the
next three are 2-word lines, as in the original form, the next is the
"title line", followed by three irregular, partial lines, with three
full lines at the bottom followed by a final two-word (split-word: win dow)
line. It actually looks a little like a television, if that idea is already in
your head.
On
page 42 we find one of the poems published in Otoliths ("my red
lung", or "eye"). It is a 3 -- 7 -- 3 "television"
form, with 5 of the "2-word lines" having three words in this
particular configuration of the form.
The
rhyme-scheme is:
A , A , B , C , B , D , E , F , G , D , E
, H , A
here
is the original
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhQRv5HcFMU7JNV7hzrlo-AGLcXzEgOitr5XS-j2IixeYvIW-qT2S_H6TzcmBeGszxpslIBtIvLADbd_6fm8WfQP8ms-h-6CsI2TB1x3sFmyeqRJMGlG3vhCRAFwImnQBUZP8uUmd5O49BR//
/jmb%2B29.jpg
and
here is a remix (reading via several routes)
wheezing like uhh bean
my red lung mumbles halfway with
the
blue hung film twisting in the
breeze
dog cloud starting at the shape
jerked
my blue dog red hung cloud
lung film starting mumbles
twisting at halfway in the
the shape the breeze jerked
leg ant mule
sunk shirt
lawn rats
lot eye drink
breath pills sobs
your bluing fun
nut burbles laff
leg sunk lawn lot breath your
nut
ant eye pills bluing burbles
mule shirt rats drink sobs fun
laff
crapping in the shadows with my
pis
sant log floor dirter cuddled
drink your
flossing slobber wheezing like
uhh bean
crapping sant flossing in log
slobber the floor wheezing
shadows dirter with cuddled
drink uhh pis your bean
On
page 48 we find a 15-line version of the "television" form: top three
lines full, middle seven lines partial (one 3-word line, two 2-word lines, four
3-word lines), followed by four full lines, and a final line with the letter
spread across the page ('n', aligned to the left, 't' aligned to the right,
'ex' in the center: "next"). The version has a three-part title:
cages up ex.
On
the final page is a 17-line version of the "television" form: the
first and last lines have letters spread across the page (top: 'w' at the left
margin, 'e' in the center, 't' at the right; bottom: 'bo' at the left, 'o' in
the center, and 'ks' at the right); the top three and the bottom four lines are
full; and the center eight lines are partial.
This
last poem is over twice the size of the first poems in the book. I am tempted
to say "over twice as long" as would be the standard way of
describing the relationship of a seventeen-line poem to a seven-line poem, but
that description seems inadequate for an understanding of how this form has
morphed and evolved through the pages of this book. It seems more accurate to
think in terms of volume, as if we were describing the size of two containers.
So the last poem in the book is over twice as big as the first poem in the
book. It contains that much more of the "stuff" that this kind of
container was made to hold. Exactly "what kind of stuff this kind of
container was made to hold" has been the subject of my writing in this
essay. There are some letters, sequenced and juxtaposed, some spaces, between
words and between letters, some sound patterns (not entirely subjective, but
nuanced from one ear to another); there are some structural patterns, some
formal elements, a visual as well as a textual syntax.
These
poems, as containers, invite us to work inside them, to play with the things we
find there, to move things around, to look at what is there from different
angles, to combine and recombine. Formally, these poems are as solid as
sonnets. But the elements of which they are made are interchangeable, unstable,
imbricate. Each word, each letter, in its place inside the poem, is a
provisional solution to a problem posed by the structural requirements of the
poem. An extra 'h' here, an extra 'r' there, these are ad hoc arrangements, the
poet working with what he has in front of him, rearranging the furniture in the
room. Gradually the reader becomes accustomed to this kind of thinking. We can
make this work. We have everything we need right here. Mumbles twisting at the
ant, my blue cloud, lawn eye bluing, shadows cuddled like uhh bean.
_________________________________________
*rhyme-scheme for the
Keatsian sonnet:
Either
A -- B A -- B C -- A D --
E
or
A -- B B -- B B -- C B --
D
-- C
-- D
-- B -- C -- D
-- E
-- C -- A -- C -- A -- B
-- D
*****