This section contains 293 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |
Wright himself is a contentious presence [in Bloodlines]…. He is on the move. His poems fairly explode from the page in hurly-burly refrain, elliptical syntax, and giddy shifts that recall Hopkins:
Sucked in and sucked out, tidewash
Hustles its razzamatazz across the cut lips
of coral, the thousands of tiny punctures
Spewing and disappearing….
(p. 117)
Wright is a sped-up silent flick, these poems are ways out of ourselves, ways to accomplish "the getaway by the light of yourself," ways to dream the page, then disappear. Wright invites comparison with the cinematic: some poems have a grainy, pointillist texture, particularly the "memory sequences"—flickering home movies with a hand-held camera. There is something "inhuman, something you can't know" in beauty and the poet does not want to dwell too long anywhere, or move too close to the mystery—home is "what you keep making." Wright's a perennial tenant—moves...
This section contains 293 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |