The poetry of the everyday
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DEEP in his wondrous journals, Thoreau wrote that an “old poet comes to watch his moods as closely as the cat does a mouse.”
So he or she must, though it’s probably too often forgotten that even the most profound introspection is simply an extension of writerly observation. Poetry is most satisfying -- and magical in that ancient sense -- when it becomes a window through which we simultaneously gaze out and inward.
Realizing that anew is one of the many pleasures to be had from 58-year-old David Tucker’s first collection of poetry, “Late for Work.” The poet Philip Levine selected these poems as the winner of the Bakeless Prize, which is annually awarded by the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference. In a brief introduction, he points to one of the poems’ considerable strengths: “The writing is so precise and economical, the language so familiar and ordinary that if you’re not reading closely you can miss how glorious the achievement is.” Indeed, some large part of these poems’ success resides in the stark eloquence of perfectly ordinary expression. Take these lines from the bedside of a dying parent:
My father talks between
emphysema gasps
about his high school days, the
shot he made
to beat Hohenwald one night
sixty years ago, the arc of it
high and too sharp but in it went
with a kiss
from the top of the backboard....
Like a Shaker chair, these lines are beautiful because the maker is unashamed of his joinery and has confidence in the integrity of everyday material, which in this case is the distinctive rush of American speech. Tucker’s technical virtuosity tends to be overshadowed by the novelty of his day job -- he is the assistant managing editor for metro news at the New Jersey Star-Ledger -- and by the fact that newspaper journalism is the subject of many of his poems.
In “City Editor Looking for News,” he captures the restless, primal appetite of a local news honcho prodding reporters toward the day’s deadline:
What did Nick the Crumb say
before he died? What noise
did his fist make when he begged
Little Pete
not to whack him with a power
saw? Did it go thub like a
biscuit
against a wall or sklack like a
seashell cracking open?
Did he say his mother’s name?
Has anybody even talked
to his friggin’ mother? Is she
broke or sick and
abandoned?
Is she dying of a broken heart?
Do I have to think
of these things all by myself?
“Morning Edition” precisely conveys the feeling that descends over a daily newspaper when that day’s deadline is past:
When I walk out of the
newsroom,
usually around midnight these
newsy days,
there’s always a scattering of
copy editors left,
tapping out changes for the first
edition.
No one is talking, no one looks
up,
hands flying, they lean over
their keyboards
like racers on motorcycles.
How peaceful to be one of the
lucky ones
off deadline now, to walk
through this light rain
to the parking lot, thinking, what
the hell,
it’s just a newspaper.
In an introduction to a chapbook of Tucker’s poems published three years ago, Robert Pinsky -- no mean poet and critic himself -- caught the symbiosis of this poet’s vocations with great precision. “His seismograph tracks the newsroom’s trembling for event,” Pinsky wrote, “charting the peaks and valleys of our general human need for sensation or knowledge. He writes about that need clearly, cleanly, with a reporter’s respect for information and a poet’s awareness of the undisclosed.” In a recent interview Tucker himself described this duality: “Journalism is about what the facts tell us. Poetry’s about what the facts don’t tell us.”
That’s the sensibility marvelously and unsentimentally at work in “And This Just In”:
Those footfalls on the stairs
when the night shift went
home,
the sunlight fanning through the
dinosaur’s rib cage,
the janitor’s sneeze -- we’re
asking questions,
we’d like to know more.
The moth in the clock tower at
city hall,
the 200th generation to sleep
there -- we may banner the
story
across page one. And in Metro
we’re leading
with the yawn that traveled city
council chambers
this morning, then slipped into
the streets
and wound through the city. The
editorial page
will decry the unaccountable
boredom
that overtook everyone around
three in the afternoon.
Features praises the slowness of
moonlight
making its way around the
house, staying
an hour in each chair, the
inertia
of calendars not turned since
winter.
A watchman humming in the
parking lot
at Broad and Market -- we have
that --
with a sidebar on the bronze
glass
of a whiskey bottle cracking into
cheap jewels
under his boots. A boy walking
across the ball field
an hour after the game -- we’re
covering that silence.
We have reporters working hard,
we’re getting
to the bottom of all of it.
A decade or so ago, I worked a job pretty much like Tucker’s, supervising reporters who covered cops, transit, hospitals and local government in all its grinding -- but consequential -- minutiae. Some part of the job involved bucking up young reporters who had undermined their own morale by comparing their gritty daily lives with the superficial glamour of their colleagues’ foreign and national assignments.
These talks usually came at the end of a long day’s reporting, and they were weary enough to be tolerant of the slightly elliptical. So I’d ask them if they’d ever read Patrick Kavanagh, and when they’d shrugged their “no,” I’d tell them how he fought to find his voice as a poet while farming his family’s 16 muddy acres in Ireland’s dreary County Monaghan. In his short poem “Epic,” he recalled the months in 1938 when the rest of the world hung on the outcome of the Sudeten Crisis and his neighbors were utterly consumed by a dispute over a small, rocky field. The poet despaired of ever making art from such lives lived in such a place:
Till Homer’s ghost came
whispering to my mind.
He said: I made the Iliad from
such
A local row. Gods make their
own importance.
Thoreau found the world in a snowflake. Tucker has discovered it in a New Jersey city room and within his home’s four walls. His fortunate readers have this sparely elegant collection as an affirmation of the epic in the everyday.
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