| 
     
      
       AMY UNSWORTH  
      Review | Five Terraces, by Ann Fisher-Wirth 
      Eastern poetic traditions, western contemporary   poetic forms, characters and actors from the theatre, multiple geographies   including Mississippi, Sweden, and France—all can be found rubbing elbows in   this collection of poems by Ann Fisher-Wirth. Even though the structure and   approach of the poems change from a more imagistic Eastern approach to the free   verse of contemporary American poetry, the poems coalesce to provide a thematic   whole that is eye-opening in the honest and unflinching appraisal of what it is   like to be a woman passing through the middle of her life into new understanding   and maturity. 
      The long sequences, both called “Walking Wu Wei’s   Scroll,” which open and close Five Terraces provide an intriguing   framework for a diverse collection that includes mostly well-crafted free   verse. Structurally, “Walking Wu Wei’s Scroll” works much like the curtain and   proscenium arch of theatre, transitioning the reader from the outside world to   the inner world of the artist. The sequences describe the experience of   observing a scroll painting and set the pace for reading the rest of the poems.   Taking each section of the scroll into close consideration, the poem models for   the reader how to approach and interact with another’s work of art.   Snapshot-like, each segment presents a single moment, with all of its   possibilities intact. The sequence also begins to delineate the themes through   imagistic portrayals of desire, grief, loss, and denial of self. Furthermore,   it introduces the philosophical goal of inhabiting the moment which the speaker   seeks to embody throughout the book: 
      
        Ah, the courage to leave   something empty  
          To wait, and wait 
                                          And   wait, 
           As the hair-thin fishing boats float   and wait 
                              till at last, the world (as we call it) 
          reconstitutes itself in the solemnity of boulders. 
       
      By contrast, “The Trinket Poems,” raw and powerful in their   examination of desire felt and denied, express the disquiet of a middle-aged   woman’s struggle with her own physical changes and her continued, if thinly   concealed, sexual desire. This section chronicles the author’s performance of   Tennessee Williams’s character Trinket in a 2002 staging of The   Mutilated. Trinket’s rough and bawdy sexuality acts as a foil to the   speaker’s hesitancy in expressing her own potent sexuality. Fisher-Wirth   presents a wrenching contrast between the young players “like a pack of puppies   with each other’s bodies” and the mature distance of the speaker who is all too   aware of her body’s aging: “the raddled flesh you can’t help / wrapping like mangy   furs around the queen.” Yet, even in her distressed contemplation, the speaker   asks, “but what is missing after all?” and, for a moment, she “steps into the   fire” of her youthful passions once again. It is this awareness of what is   real and what is only stage glitter and greasepaint which prevents the Trinket   poems from slipping into a maudlin catalogue of the discomforts of aging and   elevates this series to a meditation of acceptance despite loss, as in “Butoh:   Bird”:    
      
        How silly you are, Trinket. The   world 
          Is infinite. Leave your room by the   spiral  
          staircase, leave the ghostly   bedstead and  
          the half-smoked cigarette,   Mardi Gras bead 
          iridescent, gold, blue as   the veins of  
          your hands on the mirror. Take your scar— 
          what poets call the proud   flesh. Wear it. 
          Pain is infinite.                                                         
       
      Acceptance of loss is one of the primary themes in the   collection; the poems in subsequent sections cover more typical occurrences in a   woman’s life such as the deaths of both parents and her children’s passage from   childhood into adulthood. Less expected is the rediscovery of a lost love from   her youth and the painful realization that, despite whatever desire she may have   to rekindle the earlier passion, there is no possibility of reclaiming that lost   love without destroying the life she’s been living for the past forty years. The speaker learns that her place is “not to cause, but to accept this pain.”   The question becomes, not why should I suffer loss, but why should I not   suffer? The best example of this motif is in “Still the Bodhisattva Comes,” in   which ”the Bodhisattva comes / to teach us the path through suffering” and the   speaker realizes that, although the outcome, which in this poem is the death of   the cat, may be postponed, it will eventually—“If not now it will be later”—   occur, in spite of all she does.  
      Since death and suffering are inescapable and unimaginable the   speaker realizes that the only way through suffering is to love. “Bring every   bowl and ewer, / every cup and chalice, jar / for love will fill them all,” she   admonishes the reader, and “shake them out when you need them most // For love   is strong as death.” Cecilia Woloch aptly comments that the poems demonstrate   “a love big enough to take in the world and conjure the erasure of everything so   beloved.” In bringing together life and death, being and not being, the poems   heighten the sense of urgency; love becomes less abstract, more burning as the   speaker contemplates encroaching death in poems such as “Marriage”:     
      
        Night opens her   dress 
          The great winds of the   world 
          Arrange themselves for storm outside   our window 
        I pull the quilts around us   closer. 
        That such a one as he should ever   die— 
       
      Fisher-Wirth’s poems show the broad range of approaches that   free verse makes possible. Her use of line breaks and spacing in the poems is   impeccable and helps to reinforce, at times breathlessly, at times with tight   control, the emotional content of her work, as in “Here”:  
      
        We don’t need, yet, to step       
                                                                 back inside houses, here grief   is 
                      not yet, the rain   sluices 
                                  down on me,   on his chill flesh, 
                                                           his drenched flannel shirt, his collarbone 
                                               still with its warm pulse, what’s dry? 
          Nothing, nothing, laughing   so 
                                               in the woods where people won’t come 
                                   where   people won’t come except us in the thunder. 
       
      Less effective, I feel, are the prose poems scattered through   the text. While at times these poems fill in important narrative details (for   example one introduces the lover who will be at the center of the narrator’s   emotional crisis), they don’t stand alone outside the context of the book. A   notable exception is “The River” with its combination of prose lines and free   verse which together illustrate the author’s imagined vision of life passing   into death.    
      Fisher-Wirth’s joy in language, and in the play between words’   meanings in different languages—for instance, “Blesser: (Fr.) To   Wound, to Hurt; to Offend, to Injure; to Wring, to Shock, to Gall”—is also a   source of pleasure. But what makes Five Terraces so compelling is its   central message: The speaker is able to inhabit moments of grief and loss, and   come finally to peace. Fisher-Wirth invites the reader too to look behind the   mask, to face and accept the real, in all of its anguish and joy.    
      Ann Fisher-Wirth is the author of two books of poems: Blue Window (Archer Books, 2003) and Five Terraces (Wind Publications, 2005). She   has also published two chapbooks: The Trinket Poems (Wind, 2003) and Walking Wu Wei’s Scroll (Drunken Boat, 2005). Her poems have appeared in The Georgia Review, The Kenyon Review, The   Connecticut Review, ISLE, Runes, and other   journals,  and in numerous anthologies. A Professor of English, she teaches environmental literature, poetry   seminars, and workshops at the University of Mississippi. Her academic publications include, William Carlos Williams and Autobiography: The Woods of His Own Nature,   and numerous articles on American writers. 
        
         | 
     |