Genine Lentine

 

 

“You know that poem of yours with the ________ ?”

How does a poem change in memory? What elements take on particular significance? What gets forgotten, replaced, confounded, or exaggerated?

The postcards displayed here are responses in a project exploring questions such as these. Beginning with a reading for Ninth Letter in January 2007, for about a year, when I gave readings, I distributed postcards that were blank on one side and on the other was my address and a stamp, along with the request for people to draw or write any memory they had of the poem and then mail the postcard to me. I wasn’t asking for commentary, though a few people offered some, just whatever trace of memory they might have, including, of course, the possibility they might have remembered nothing.

As a reader remembers a poem, a new version of that poem takes shape, and the poem becomes a social being with a life of its own.

What sparked this project was a fascination with the process whereby someone can describe a poem to the person who wrote the poem in a way that the poet cannot recognize “her own” poem. For example, a friend once asked me, “You know that poem of yours where that guy’s come tastes like mercury?” What? I felt 100% certain she wasn’t talking about one of my poems. Everything about her question, down to the vagueness of “that guy,” was unrecognizable to me. Though it may be true that I have perhaps a disproportionate reference to bodily fluids in my poems, and even, in fact, a poem “about” ejaculation, I had no poem fitting her description, nor, thankfully, as regards heavy metals, had I had an occasion for writing one. But she was resolute, and we worked at synching up our certainties, trying to trace what merged associations might be operating in her question. And then I remembered a poem called “Everything Bagel” that tracks the dissolution of a relationship and includes the lines below:

Sometime around the middle
of the beginning of the end,
my face still now and then buried
in his neck– grim economy
of the maintenance fuck–-
I could tell he was about to come
by the scent of sulfur
that started rising
from the corner of his mouth,
and I had to turn my head.

This friend who asked the question had been in a workshop where we’d discussed this poem a couple of years before. At the table that day, there prevailed a general air of disgust, and in my friend’s memory, the image became even more direct: sulfur had become mercury; scent had become taste.

Repulsive, I know, my apologies–but the poem is about a breakup. Given the other examples I could have used to illustrate the instigating phenomenon that inspired this project, I hesitated to use this one, but decided it was perfect because the lines are also related thematically to the project in that a person the speaker has known intimately for many years becomes a stranger in a basic and visceral way: the speaker can no longer recognize this person’s scent. This estrangement is the inverse process of that in “Unseen Planet,” which tracks the ways people come into connection with each other, even before they’ve met.

Also at the heart of this project is my love for awkward translation. Language that that bears the rupture of having passed through another language system can evoke a highly particular rapture in me, to the extent that I love to run a poem through several languages in an online translator such as Babelfish and then “back” into English. A phrase like “skimming scales” might come back as “foaming the staircase.” It’s intriguing to trace the linguistic path in such an example and this is true too of poems as they are carried across not another language, but another person’s memory, a translation through social memory.

So I thought of the postcards as a way to peer into this “translation” process. I imagine a version of the poem that somehow contains all of these renderings.

Part of what intrigues me is the way memory incorporates the poem into the listener’s own store of images and associations. In this process, nouns move along trajectories of synonymy and hyponymy, being traded for similar words or more or less specific ones. Also, I was interested in whether there might be some “interference” from other poems I read during the reading, or from other poems in general, both of which happened in a few postcards. I was interested too just in what listeners remembered, even if it didn’t necessarily change in the process. It struck me that a basic principle might be that whatever is animate is what gets remembered. The hawk. The shark. And of course, the cute dog! The poem ends with a “teacup” chihauhua named Kilo, and indeed Kilo showed up on many postcards.

Eyewitness Testimony by Elizabeth Loftus investigates the unreliability of memory as evidence because, among other infidelities, the witness often introduces elements that aren’t there, but that might logically be there based on frames and scripts that come from the person’s world knowledge. Similarly, a poem supplies an armature of elements from which a reader can build a world, and it’s easy to blur what the reader knows of that world with what is actually “in the poem.” Thus, in one postcard, the poem takes on some stacked blue crates and some fish nets, which would likely be somewhere in the harbor scene, but they’re not in the poem. Or maybe in some very real way, they are in the poem. A post office becomes a Laundromat [places that involve waiting?]; a woman of no specific age becomes an old woman [Is it something about the act of staring that ages her in this reader’s mind? That a younger person would not be looking at the speaker?]

One of the most surprising postcards I received says, “My Name is Ricky. I never hear my name, so even if it’s superficial, I got that connection.” You think someone is going to enter a poem through some rare, subtle, profound affinity a phrase somehow manages to locate, but in this case, it was the simple fact of mentioning this person’s name. Who would have imagined the name Ricky is so rarely uttered? I found this postcard strangely encouraging to think that this very simple unconsidered part of the poem could have actually offered a reader something. The sculptor Elizabeth King once said, about one’s work, whatever work may be, that “you’re always doing more than you think you are.”

“Unseen Planet” investigates how someone moves from stranger to friend. Part of why I chose this poem for the project is that the exchanges that happen in the postcards open a line of communication and connection not usually available after a reading. Usually, you give a reading and maybe you talk to some people afterwards, but generally there’s not much of a chance to hear anything more from the listener. I’ve really enjoyed the way the postcards extend that conversation.

And also, the foregoing is all well and good conceptually, but mainly it’s always fun to get mail.

 

Unseen Planet

All I did was tilt my foot slightly
and the woman across the car stopped
                       staring. Without even

looking up at her, I could feel her glance
lift, the mass and weight of it, like that ledge
                       of current you can actually see

when a hawk scrambles up onto an air-
stream. I clear my throat and the man standing
                       before me clears his, mirror

neurons sparking. Everyone’s a stranger at first,
but by such a narrow margin. Stanley had a theory
                       about the strangers in my dreams.

In one variation, the stranger sits at the edge
of the bed watching me sleep, but whatever
                       the stranger does, it is with

a benevolence so thorough, it shocks me
awake. Who was it do you think? Did you recognize
                       the face? he’d always ask.

The whole point is that they’re strangers, I’d say,
but he had something very specific in mind.
                       He’d never tell me what.

Next time check the face. Everyone’s a stranger
at first. Who’s next on the docket of strangers
                       to be bumped up?

Most progress shown in: adjusting to a new situation.
Every time someone comes into this reading room
                       I expect to know the person

and I look up and it’s someone I’ve never seen. Are
there that many people in town? An exception is
                       the woman I recognized the second

time she came in and went to the exact same (Dan
Brown) paperback on the spinning rack, picked it up
                       and then put it back. I want

to sit here until I see someone I know or until the sun
goes down. The only difference between drawing from life
                       and drawing from the imagination

is the time lapse is shorter. This is one of those quotes
with multiple attributions, like the one that’s either
                       Nelson Mandela or Marianne

Williamson. One putative source is a painter
whose work I’m not that into, so, having said that,
                       I won’t mention his name here;

it’s more an indifference than an aversion, but given
that he allegedly said this, I leave more margin
                       for one day seeing something I haven’t

yet. Difference between a friend and a stranger: one
or two conversations. How many will it take to tip
                       the spam filter? Unseen planet

creates a wobble. I want to sit here until I see someone
I already know or until the sun sets. At least
                      on the way here, I saw Ricky.

We might not have even stopped to talk, but we
were both on our bikes riding toward each other
                      and we kept veering in the same

direction to avoid crashing so finally we just stopped
in the middle of the street. He’d just been out
                 in the harbor and saw three basking

sharks—-a mother and two young ones. Don’t worry
they only eat plankton, and he wasn’t even swimming–-
                       though he could have been–-

even in November, he dives in a “dry suit”–-like a wet-
suit, but you can just zip it on right over your regular
                       clothes. But this time

he was just out on the boat, so even if basking sharks
did have teeth instead of baleen, he’d have been in no
                       danger. I know most of you

don’t know him, but you could. What is not
going to happen in this poem is that it starts out
                       remarking benignly on socioneuro-

logical microgestures and then suddenly someone you’ve
just met is getting sheared by a mother shark. You think
                       you’re all alone and the circulation

librarian says, A book just came in for you before you
hand her your card. I met a young cowboy all dressed
                       in white linen.
You think you’re alone

and the guy who asks for coins–(always coins
instead of change–can you spare some coins?) on Sixth
                       & Tenth, one morning, tells you,

Girl, I thought you’d never come out of that post office!
My brother has never gotten over the sting
                       of being spam-filtered. It leaves

a faint imprint, like those stories of people
standing next to a tree when lightning strikes, who
                       unbutton their shirt and reveal

the outline of the tree on their breast. Unseen
planet creates a wobble. That teacup chihauhua
                       next door named Kilo, usually

he won’t let anyone pet him, but he really likes you!
To view the suspect message, click this link:
                       Subject: Thinking of you….

 

{loadposition unseen_planet}

click image to view slideshow