|
SUSAN SETTLEMYRE WILLIAMS
Review | Fabulae,
by Joy Katz
(Southern
Illinois University Press, 2002)
Don't expect the narratives in Joy Katz's first
book to resolve themselves into tidy morals. There's nothing Aesopian
about Fabulae. A glance at my Latin dictionary suggests that
a more apt translation of the title is "myths," for these unsettling
poems conceal and reveal insights more spiritual and unpredictable than
aphoristic. They resist easy expectations.
The first poem of the book, "Women Must Put
Off Their Rich Apparel," presents a delicately modulated manifesto
("Women must put on plainness . . ."; "A woman must let
love recede . . ."; "the woman who at this moment / does not
need the world"). "Following the Orthodox Men," the second
poem, takes us into the oddly colorless world of Orthodox diamond merchants
and their women "modestly draped with linen, / . . . eyes cast down
and . . . neck curved as the nail clippings / my grandfather wrapped
and blessed and tossed into the stove / on Fridays . . .," a world
from which Katz has excluded herself "from the moment I, as a girl,
drew God— / who is never permitted to be drawn—with wild
hair the color of sapphire." Either of these poems should rate inclusion
in a "best of the feminists" anthology, but such a categorization
would be simplistic. Katz's concern is less with sexual and societal
exploitation than with the terrible power of beauty and desire that lies
behind such exploitation and control.
We soon see that there's as much self-incrimination
as finger-pointing in Katz's work, as much empathy as blame; in her fables,
everyone is implicated. A Chinese concubine of 1931, confronted with
the decree outlawing foot-binding, announces that she prefers death to "walking
about / upon the flat lotus boats of country women." The Garden
of Eden is populated here with bulimics and the obsessive-compulsive.
As the title of one poem puts it, "The Imperfect Is Our Paradise."
On the other hand, Katz recognizes that almost any
desire, at its most intense, contains a longing for the transcendent.
Reflecting on the marriage of John Wesley Powell, the first Caucasian
to see the Grand Canyon, Katz wonders, "What was it like to live
with someone / who has seen this kind of beauty?" A poem about friends
dying of AIDS concludes, "Sleep pulls you down; / it is a sweet
place the body is going." In the prose poem "Falling," perhaps
the book's most memorable piece, the adolescent narrator, warned of the
dangers of heroin, lies awake terrified: "I would like it. I would
like it like heaven and would be lost." In the same poem, Proserpina's
descent into the Underworld becomes irrevocable when she finally consents
to anal sex. "This was the day she returned, bloodied and dreamy,
one broken heel and dress inside out, to the frozen earth—the first
time spring came late. Ceres knew then she had lost her."
Loss, death, and displacement inevitably form a
companion theme to desire, particularly in a series of poems about the
Holocaust. Fifty years after Dachau, an elderly bridge player is unable
to live in either the present or the past. Darwinian strategies for survival
have "given her something like an extra / wing," and she lacks "the
right form for either world." The line between the living and dead
becomes blurred. Katz herself, visiting Terezin, tries repeatedly to
recite the Kaddish to protect the spirit of her friend Beatrice, who "is
dead already, but I worry for her; so fragile, to imagine this place
would have killed her." But "the lines get tangled. I forget
it's not a death poem, that it's praise—."
Katz, as a poet, however, must negotiate the competing
claims of death and desire, elegy and praise. The poem itself is dangerous
territory ("Do not step too near the hole I have drawn— /
there is no fence around it"), but "there is nowhere for me
to go / but to face the entrance into the ground . . ." The urgency
of her undertaking, "the insist," is reflected in the spareness
of Katz's language and her narratives. They are often pared to the bone,
approaching the austerity of a Louise Glück, although without Glück's
occasional querulousness. Katz grieves but is not aggrieved.
Her imagery of despair sometimes echoes Sylvia Plath's,
but Fabulae is neither self-absorbed nor histrionic. More often
than not the poems, even those in which Katz herself explicitly appears,
focus on the sufferings of others and her scrupulous care to understand
them. When a man reveals to his lover that he was sexually abused by
his grandfather, the woman responds, in "Sunday morning and the
light," by telling him of finding a freshly laid egg:
She could not touch it without knowing it had
come
through the body of some living thing,
and somehow still belonged to that.
She wanted to drop the egg
and at the same time stand very still and hold it until
it became something light,
as much a part of herself as breathing.
With this unexpected image, Katz conveys not only
sexual touching suddenly charged with tenderness but also the poet's
sense of empathy and responsibility toward the people of whom she writes.
Despite the influences of Glück and Plath and
Wallace Stevens, another poet whose presence is sometimes apparent in
her work, Katz has already laid claim to her own terrain, the rubble
of death camps, the dangerous underground passages of desire, made luminous
by imagination and unsentimental compassion. Of an old woman who has
died, she says, "Now the door of her house breathes cold air / and
her poppies belong to anybody, so I picked them. / Who am I that they
should open and cry out to me?" Katz is entitled to the open cries
of the poppies, the fragility of a new-laid egg, warm to the touch, and
all the other messages of desire and loss offered in her poetry because
she is a gifted mythographer, a teller of seriously spiritual fables.
|
|