ANNA JOURNEY
Review | The
World in Repair: Steve Gehrke's The Pyramids of Malpighi
(Anhinga
Press, 2004)
In Wallace Stevens' "Peter Quince at the Clavier" we
find a startling claim about the familiar and often false dichotomy of
body versus mind: "Beauty is momentary in the mind— / The
fitful tracing of a portal; / But in the flesh it is immortal." In The
Pyramids of Malpighi, his second book of poetry, Steve Gehrke also
seeks to comprehend beauty in the mystery of the human body, yet Gehrke's
search for comfort and understanding leads in rather a different direction
than Stevens' abstractions, taking us through an unvarnished look at
the body's flaws and failings that is another aspect of its power to
inspire awe. Through the eyes of both patients and artists, Steve Gehrke
examines "the world in repair." The savage and strange exploration
of fragility embodied in this collection of poems nevertheless has the
capacity to lend unexpected comforts to a reader faced with an inescapable
mortality.
Exploring the minute geometry of our chemical makeup,
as well as the universe at large that once "could fit / inside your
living room," Gehrke shows how abstractions alter memory, much as
a transplanted organ displaces the body, or as Jackson Pollack's flung
paint transforms the universe of the canvas. Gehrke continues developing
the themes introduced in his first collection, The Resurrection Machine,
such as the impact of disease on the body and the struggle of language
to express the ineffable, though he does so here with greater tonal flexibility,
increased formal inventiveness, and a more sophisticated synthesis of
illness and art.
Evocative of mysterious ruins, the book's title
alludes to renal pyramids within walls of the human kidney. Gehrke's
intricate pyramids recall the spiritual grandeur of the Pyramids at Giza
as well as the mysteries hidden within the body's architecture. In the
title poem, there is poignant fragility and beauty in the narrator's
abject response following a failed kidney transplant as he asserts human
inevitability: "Mother, some day our bodies / will be discovered
/ and they will call them ruins."
Gehrke juxtaposes the trauma of a futile operation
with the deconstruction of a human body invoked in a story of three people
lost in the wilderness who must revert to cannibalism. Desperate survivors
crouch around the flayed corpse "as if around a fire, as if what's
inside / could warm their hands." The narrator's own organs are "soft
as bread, petal-like, bouqueted / around the flaw." As the doctors
place his mother's kidney in his body, she "drop[s] straight through."
On the brink of turning away from extreme suffering,
Gehrke instead risks a discovery of beauty, even in death. As a woman
faces the corpse from which she has eaten, she sees
. . . a necklace of icicles
that
hangs into the opening, like a mobile
that hangs into a crib, so that she imagines angels
with
wings the size of eyebrows
The woman realizes the reality of the tragedy:
No,
that's not how it happened . . .
The fire wouldn't catch,
and
you ate the dead man cold.
The motif of a body giving out recurs in The
Pyramids of Malpighi, as the author draws from his personal experience
with faulty kidneys. Gehrke declares, "Matter is all we have,
and all we have / to lose // is inside the dialysis machine." He
explores the frailty of the body, the "broken symmetry" of
disease that is altered and displaced by doctors:
. . . the illusion
of the fixed interior revealed like a cloth
swiped from the top of a birdcage,
a hand reaching through the little metal door
altering the motion inside
Beside the suffering narrator lies the sixteen-year-old,
Abbie, who is "humming the Beatles." Dark, yet oddly comforting
humor emerges as the narrator translates lyrics from "Yellow Submarine" into "we
all live // in a dialysis machine."
Gehrke synthesizes images of cells with elements
of music, art, and speech translated through memory in "Inside the
Dialysis Machine," combining postmodern reinvention with sprawling,
hypnotic Whitmanian anaphora. Allusions range from the "masculine
sea" and "feminine air" of Moby Dick to time, "something
terribly nimble catching/ all the fingerlings," echoing Jorie Graham's "San
Sepolcro." These evocations of the composite physical and metaphysical
self swirl along with the Action Painting of Pollack—"false
/ pattern everywhere"—and portraits of malfunctioning cells.
These cells are not cells you might view with a microscope, but
. . . cells that rotated backwards,
cells with a hole burned through,
cells that kept a scream in them,
that kept time in them . . .
cells that buttoned down
a face . . .
As the poem spirals out "in all directions,
like a listening," Gehrke reminds the reader that "only absence
is permanent."
Much like the "something, somewhere" that
is "taking it all down" in "Inside the Dialysis Machine," memory
as translator of a past that continuously informs consciousness surfaces
in "First Snow: A Memory." The weathered landscape as a backdrop
to the dance moves of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers suggests that patterns
such as snow and choreography are what we use to "bind [ourselves]
to the emptiness." Gehrke's painterly layering of images—Ginger's
bloody shoes, the white snow that is "the / intricate alphabet of
the infinite"—is both monstrous and beautiful.
Gehrke's aesthetics are unwavering in regard to
compassion and the beauty inherent in pain. This collection of poems
combines cells with Pointillism, dialysis with Abstract Expressionism,
the finality of death with organs that falsely suggest a sense of metaphysical
completeness. The author's tonal control exudes empathy and subtle humor,
despite his often gruesome subject matter. Gehrke examines our partialities,
piecemeal reinventions, the self continuously in flux, in which suffering
seems, ultimately, to be a necessary darkness, one that calls beauty
back from its mysterious recesses within the body and the spirit. In The
Pyramids of Malpighi, Gehrke seeks solace in a radical way—through
an unflinching look at the physical body's limitations, celebrating its
numerous capacities for pain and encompassing its ruin within a fierce
embrace.
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