|  | DAVID WOJAHNReview | Search
          Party: Collected Poems, by William Matthews, edited
by Sebastian Matthews and Stanley Plumly
 (Houghton
Mifflin, 2004)
  Search Party brings
          together the best work of a uniquely eloquent poet, one of the most
          original voices of his generation, and surely the most readable. And
          the book comes along at the right time, for among those poets born
          roughly between 1935 and 1945—a group which includes Glück,
          Hass, Wright, Palmer, Williams, Bidart, Plumly, Pinsky, and Olds, among
          others—Matthews is the one whose reputation has seemed most at
          risk. Although Matthews was something of a ubiquitous figure on the
          literary landscape of the 1980s and early '90s, recent anthologies
          have ignored him, and his work has attracted little critical attention.
          Perhaps this has to do with Matthews' early death from a heart attack
          in 1997, but I suspect that it has more to do with the writing itself:
          Matthews' mature style remains blissfully indifferent to most of the
          prevailing literary fashions. Although his early work derives from
          the surrealist-tinged poetics of Deep Image poets such as Merwin and
          James Wright, and he never wholly abandoned the Deep Image predilection
          for startling pyrotechnical metaphors, the values of his mature work
          are Horatian—and Matthews translated Horace—arising from
          good sense, wit, an insatiable curiosity, an affable authorial presence,
          and a slightly shambling quest for wisdom. Matthews was not interested
          in the earnest disassemblings and assaults on linearity which have
          come to be such an important aspect of our period style, nor did he
          display the self-indulgence and mere schtick which contemporary poets
          have often confused with wit. Search Party makes a very persuasive
          case for Matthews' continuing importance, thanks not only to the poems
          but also to a superbly insightful introductory essay by his friend
          and fellow poet Stanley Plumly. The book is not a definitive Matthews—a
          good number of worthy poems from his individual collections and even
          his 1992 Selected Poems have been omitted, and Plumly and
          his co-editor Sebastian Matthews have culled only a tantalizingly small
          portion of the many poems which Matthews published in journals but
          did not include in his books. Ideally, a Complete Matthews will be
          available someday; in the meantime, this book does ample justice to
          his writing.
 Over the years, I reviewed a number of Matthews' collections, and came to the
  poems of Search Party with the notion that I'd revisit some personal
  favorites but would not find much to surprise me. Not so. Again and again I
  found myself marveling at how fresh and lively the poems seemed, and how consistently
  strong the writing had been. We of course want the Collecteds of writers
  whose work we feel we know well to impress us in this way, but too often the
  poems of such volumes can seem a little shopworn; we see too transparently
  how the exercise of an individual style can lead to self-imitation, or how
  sustained development can be followed by decline. But Matthews' work avoids
  these pitfalls, and I found myself once again trying to determine what gives
  these easygoing and genial poems their capacity to suddenly shift tone, deepen
  their intensity, and startle us with their gravity and wry insights. In this
  respect, the modernist forebear who Matthews most resembles may be Frost, whose
  influence on Matthews does not emerge in the form of those bland pastorals
  that make up the work of so many of those contemporary poets who claim Frost
  as a master, but which instead comes from the figure who Jarrell described
  as the "dark Frost," the chatty and avuncular nihilist of poems such
  as "Out, Out" and "Design." Flood, the collection
  in which Matthews arrived at his mature style, closes with "Sitting on
  the Porch of the Frost Place, Franconia, NH," an effort which manages
  to be both homage to the elder poet and ars poetica. The opening is
  classic Matthews:
 
         So here the great man
            stood,Fermenting malice and poems
 We have to be nearly as fierce
 Against ourselves as he
 Not to misread by their disguises.
 Blue in dawn haze, the tamarack
 Across the road is new since Frost
 And thirty feet tall already.
 No doubt he liked to scorch off
 Morning fog by simply staring through it
 Long enough so that what he saw
 Grew visible. "Watching the dragon
 Come out of the Notch," his children
 Used to call it. And no wonder
 He chose a climate whose winter
 And house whose isolation could be
 Stern enough to his wrath and pity
 As to make them seem survival skills
 He'd learned on the job, farming
 Fifty acres of pasture and woods.
 For cash crops he had sweat and doubt
 And moralizing rage, those staples
 Of the barter system . . .
  The method is conversational and anecdotal, but
        it can give way to a more elevated diction and statement ("And house
        whose isolation could be / Stern enough to his wrath and pity"),
        and Matthews further avoids prosiness through his smooth tetrameter,
        his snaking sentences, his surprising verb forms and similes, and an
        Audenesque penchant for unusual adjectives; our sense that the poem is talking with
        us never diminishes, yet we are also aware of the poem's elegance. It
        is, however, an elegance which refrains from certainty and glib pronouncements,
        as we see from the poem's ending, a meditation on the uncertain nature
        of vision and insight—an apt subject for a poem which evokes the
        spirit of Frost: 
         I won't be longer on the porchThan it takes to look out once
 And see what I've taught myself
 In two months here to discern:
 Night restoring its opacities,
 Though for an instant as intense
 And evanescent as waking from a dream
 Of eating blackberries and almost
 Being able to remember it, I think
 I see the part—haze, dusk, light
 Broken into grains, fatigue,
 The mineral dark of the White Mountains,
 The wavering shadows steadying themselves—
 Separate, then joined, then seamless:
 The way, in fact, Frost's poems,
 Like all great poems, conceal
 What they merely know, to be
 Predicaments. However long
 It took to watch what I thought
 I saw, it was dark when I was done,
 Everywhere and on the porch,
 And since nothing stopped
 My sight, I let it go.
  The tonal variety within Matthews' poems is always
        impressive; so, too, is the range of his subject matter—and it
        should be added his poems have subject matter; they have no
        patience with postmodernist strategies designed to undermine our sense
        of the poem's occasion and speaker. There are of course the prevailing
        and obsessive subjects familiar to Matthews' readers—his many poems
        about jazz and the lives of jazz musicians, his later but similarly abiding
        poems about opera, his recollections of a fifties childhood, and above
        all his meditations on love and its inevitable failures (though Matthews
        treats this latter subject in a highly restrained fashion, without any
        vestiges of the confessional). But just as important are Matthews' odes
        to objects and events which manage to be at once quotidian and oddball,
        subjects which escape the attention of other poets or which others would
        deem unpoetic. How many other contemporary poets can write engagingly
        about truffle pigs, nurse sharks, onions, defunct pro basketball teams, "Another
        Real Estate Deal on Oahu," "A Poetry Reading at West Point," "Condoms
        Then," and "Condoms Now"? Or offer up monologues whose
        speakers are the likes of Billie Holiday's accompanist on the one hand,
        and "Homer's Seeing Eye Dog" on the other? At their best, these
        efforts reflect a kind of affable detente with the world by a poet who
        refuses to make distinctions between high culture and low or the comic
        and the serious. True, there are other poets of his approximate generation
        who express similar interests and strive for a similar range of concerns—I
        think of Marvin Bell, Robert Pinsky, Denise Duhamel, Billy Collins, and
        Stephen Dunn, among others. But few of these poets are as lively as Matthews,
        or as capable of investing the quotidian with such depth. Matthews aims
        less for satire than for small and querulous reckonings with contemporary
        culture, a culture whose complexity offers a staggeringly large number
        of new opportunities, both funny and unsettling, to express human folly.
        Consider, for example, "The Memo," a previously uncollected
        poem which begins with some fairly banal lampooning, but which soon turns
        upon itself, becoming yet another of Matthews' many sly versions of the ars
        poetica:  I want this up and running, the office bully wrote, next Monday and I insist
 blah blah blah blah. Each blah stands for three
 or four moronic instances, because
 a poem honors the non-reading hours
 in its readers' lives by brevity, just
 as grace uses far less time than dinner.
 And this poem, presto, replaces the memo.Gentle reader, you didn't need that shit.
 You work hard, right? You wanna be the screen
 on which some bozo you don't know projects
 his lurid drama, Bozo: The Lean Years?
 Or do you want to control your leisure?
 If so you'll want to take this simple test.
  Like many of his later poems, "Memo" is
        a loose sonnet, the formal restraints helping to give the writing the
        kind of epigrammatic inevitability which is a hallmark of Matthews' style.
        Also characteristic is the offhanded metaphorical wit of "a poem
        honors the non-reading hours / in its reader' lives by brevity, just
        / as grace uses far less time than dinner." And, just as Matthews'
        work is characterized by surprising subject matter and fresh approaches
        to familiar topics, so too is it characterized by a slightly wacky but
        exact approach to figurative language and analogy. Where else but in
        Matthews can we find a chainsaw described as a "tantrum with an
        engine," opera singers characterized as "poached in sweat /
        and smell[ing] like fermented pigs," or the speaker coming out of
        surgery to "wait like a lizard for the first fizzles / of sensation
        from my lower, absent, better half: / and like a truculent champagne
        / the bottom of my body loosed a few / petulant bubbles, then a few more
        . . ."? Matthews in passages such as these expresses the art of
        poesy as well as the art of joke-telling, with an acute sense of timing
        and delight in comic wordplay: here, as elsewhere, Matthews puns relentlessly,
        offers zingers and one-liners, all in the space of a few lines. Fortunately,
        these qualities, which can sometimes turn into mere indulgences, are
        usually counterpointed by a similarly characteristic concern for statement,
        though for Matthews statement tends to function with the same sort of
        slipperiness and unpredictability which distinguishes his metaphors.
        A good illustration of this is the opening of his elegy for Reggae great
        Bob Marley: 
         In an elegy for a musician,one talks a lot about music,
 which is a way to think about time
 instead of death of Marley,
 and isn't poetry itself about time?But death is about death and not time.
 Surely the real fuel for elegy
 is anger to be mortal.
 No wonder Marley sang so often of an ever-arriving future, that verb tense
 invented by religion and political rage.
 Soon come. Readiness is all
 and not enough . . .  Matthews' limitations, like that of so many other
        good poets, derive from those very things which give his voice its piquancy
        and charm. His banter can at times grow benumbing, like that of a loquacious
        dinner guest whose wit starts to fail him by the time the bottles of
        wine have been emptied and dessert is served. Furthermore, like Auden
        (another of Matthews' most important masters, and the subject of one
        of his elegies), Matthews' rapacious curiosity and discursiveness can
        sometimes seem self-protective. Although we suspect that many of his
        poems arise from a great emotional vulnerability, his stance is at times
        frustratingly detached and guarded. I suppose that Matthews himself would
        attempt to put a bit of spin on these criticisms, noting that reserve
        and self-protection are qualities which we admire in the work of classical
        poets such as Martial and Horace, both of whom Matthews rendered into
        English. But sometimes stoicism is the wrong kind of reserve, which is
        to say that while Matthews always delights and engages me, it is only
        more rarely that he moves me. Yet I know that I will frequently  return
        to his work, and that its pleasures and consolations are greater than
        that of almost all of his contemporaries. Whether Matthews will continue
        to find the readers he deserves is another question, and says more about
        the fickleness of the poetry audience than about Matthews' capacity to
        endure. Search Party reminds us that there has been no other
        American poet quite like him, and that for some of us who read poetry
        he is sorely missed.     |  |