Thursday, October 3, 2019

Finishing Black Crow Dress

Oh! I finished Roxane Beth Johnson's Black Crow Dress this morning (I try to start my day with poetry), and there are such beautiful images and lines, I must share them.

In "Clea, Living and Dying," a voice that we've heard throughout the book suddenly shares that she's had many lives, rather than just one. Describing her different lives, she tell us: "Once, a saint: my soul clung to God the way an egg grips its separate parts." I've had a lot of experience with eggs (having had laying chickens and ducks) but I don't think I'll ever look at an egg the same way again.

I didn't mention yesterday that some poems are in the voices of the slaveowning people, rather than the enslaved people themselves. In "Caroline Confronts Tobias Finch," we learn that Tobias, a slaveowner who loved, in his way (which is to say in a brutal, dominating, and demeaning way: is that love?), Caroline, ultimately leaves her to die in the snow. Beyond death, she won't forgive him, which denies both of them their rest. So there's a wonderful turnaround in this poem. Caroline says, "You follow me now, hollering through every season, saying Caroline, let me go." Oh! So smart. Beyond death, the ironic end--no, the eternity--he deserves! Who was it who said that art has something to do with justice? (The quote I'm thinking of but can't quite recall is Yeats, I think? Also, I think, many others have yoked the two together.)

The final poem, "Goodbye to My Favorite Ghost, Clea," is in the poet's voice. Listen to this: "Now, put your hands in the loam, pull damp moss from the earth's scalp--a pillow for your grave." The earth's scalp! Oh! I love images of the earth as a person, as a body. And using scalp is an inventive and different way of doing that because scalp as a word and a thing is not particularly beautiful--it's a harsh word with a history that echoes, at least for me. So perfect. So evocative.

The ending comes full circle, with the ghosts taking their leave and the poet saying goodbye to the ghosts who at the beginning were coming to haunt her. What a wonderful book of poems!

No comments:

Post a Comment