http://myemail.constantcontact.com/Poem-A-Day--Separation-is-the-necessary-condition-for-light--by-Brian-Teare.html?soid=1110705357409&aid=y7VLnilgUpU
In Brian Teare’s “Separation is the necessary condition for light,” the central idea and almost all the imagery and phrasing strike me as precise, original, and strong. I like them a lot. The dead father’s empty mattress and hat, the "generic" fathers fathers grouped like unnamed, undifferentiated trees (what an exceptional word “generic” is in this context), the sunset lighting them up and making them "blonde" (why have I never thought of autumn trees as blonde? Shame on me), and the fatherless adult child as a drifting sail . . . all of that seems precisely right. (As a temporary survivor, I don’t see myself as a sailboat-survivor gliding over treetops, but it’s a flattering image that makes a lyrical kind of sense).
I’m not sure what I think and feel about Teare's allergy to commas and other punctuation. Also, I wonder what he’s seeing that I’m missing in the alternating left and right stanzas. However, I’m open to the argument that the lack of punctuation and the staggered placement of stanzas suggest the motions of leaves in wind as well as sails gliding dreamily along, where any pause looks and feels nothing like a punctuation mark. Maybe that’s a stretch, but I can live with it.
I struggle harder with "roots / that rise to stem that
rise.” At first I heard it as the
trees having flipped, their tops becoming their roots, which I was hearing as
an image of death. But that doesn't help me understand the fact that the roots
rise in order to "stem"—as in, prevent—another
rise, maybe adult children rising toward death.
Or maybe upright trees have risen above the ground—a kind of
levitation. Is that an image of immortality? When those roots "stem
[squelch] that rise," are they holding the survivors in the ground as they
try to rise into the air, as immortal spirits traditionally do?
In "stem," I appreciate the word play on aspects
of trees and other plants. Again, we can have “stem” as squelch, as “stem the
tide,” or we might hear a newer, fresher sense of “stem” as a verb—the leaves
or trees are not only leaving, but also growing new stems, or “stemming.” That
makes a better fit for what follows, where the autumn trees are apparently dropping
leaves: “rise // to leaf his door and cornices.” To “leaf” is an exquisite
image of fallen autumn foliage piling up, but I’d like to know how it develops
from the two lines that precede it.
In all, however, the new and lovely features in Brian
Teare’s poem more than compensate for the single speed bump caused by “rise”
and “rise” and “stem.” Of the several things that draw me to the poem, the
foremost might be the notion of fathers' being “generic” in the way trees in a
field are generic. I've certainly seen my friends' fathers as a blurry cluster
of vaguely appealing yet ordinary, un-special beings. They might be the fathers
of students as they gather awkwardly but importantly in school lobbies and
hallways on parents' visiting days.
Until Brian Teare's elegy, however, I failed to notice just
how generic and autumnly blonde they were, even those who were important, or
tried to fake importance, and how their future absence, in death, might be visualized
as the empty mattress where they had lain or their now empty felt hats.
I suspect that from here on, I’ll never see or imagine
fathers in the same way, at least not as a group. And maybe the yellow-leaved
woods in the fall will always be fathers as well as trees, whether I want them
to or not. There’s a lot more gift than burden in that, which is what good
poems give us. So in spite of one line that’s bumpy for me, I am grateful for
Brian Teare’s “Separation is the necessary condition for light,” and I won’t
soon forget it.
See also Bob Hicok’s masterful father poem, “O my pa-pa.” http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/poem/179572
I discussed it here January 2, 2010: http://banjo52.blogspot.com/search?q=o+my+pa-pa