The Idea of Poetry as the Visible Rainbow
By Carolyn Zonailo
west coast imagisme
Here, a west coast imagism, imagisme.
Not that it is necessary, but available, just as the native art
of the coast used the available materials, the available images—the
spirit of place reflected in the inhabitant's psyche. My soul
is growing here, rooted in the rain forest, along the rocky coastline,
on the line. The image continues to take root in the particular
environment but grows to such dimension it becomes universal.
To use the image as a metaphor for the method of composition,
as in my poem:
this description
image on image
vertebra on vertebra
forms a kind of
skeleton
spinal cord
to the poem
it doesn't end
with an image
but begins here:
anemone, red tulip
bone
as a tongue reaches
inside a mouth
as thighs make room
spread to allow
a lover
to allow
by Carolyn Zonailo
from "The Offering"
The anemone in the vase or the blood
of Adonis in the ancient myth; the carcass of the horse in the
island forest or the winged horse, poetry; the red tulips in Sylvia
Plath's hospital room or these spring flowers...the images begin
in the poem and the poem has its beginnings in these images, as
if blooming in foreign soil which is also somehow familiar. The
image carries with it more than momentary detail. The image has
to be accurate and can't help but be accurate. Truth has become
an anachronism and beauty is often accused of being naive but
accuracy allows us to identify. The image identifies phenomenal
reality. The image is an intermediary between the object and the
subject. Through the image the object is able to be recognized
for what it is, distinct from the observer's subjective bias,
but not separate.
the notion of romantic love
Since the goddess presiding over
the activity of poetry as soul-making is Psyche, it's not surprising
that Eros, Psyche's lover and mate, plays a part in the creative
process. Some poets are moralists, some are martyrs, some are
visionaries and some are what I would call sensualists, although
tradition has perhaps called them 'romantics'. Moralist poets
include Pound, Wordsworth, Browning, Olson. Among the famous Martyrs
are Rimbaud, Baudelaire, Shelley and Plath. The great Visionaries
include Blake, Whitman, H.D., Yeats. The Sensualists are Donne,
Mallarme, Coleridge, Keats, Stevens, Rilke....
When we come face to face with
the sensualists we are unable to escape from the notion of love,
and hence the reality of death, eros and thanatos. According
to Erich Neumann in Armor and Psyche, after Psyche becomes
a goddess there is an incredible change in human consciousness:
"The triumph of Psyche's love and her ascension to Olympus
were an event that has profoundly affected western mankind for
2000 years. For two millenniums the mystery phenomenon of love
has occupied the center of psychic development, and of culture,
art and religion."
In a sensualist poetics the phenomenal
world is the one we begin with, just as the poem begins with the
image. The creative process includes identification and recognition,
just as Psyche went through the process of discovering her love
for Eros. Through the poem we identify and recognize the world,
and this leads us to love the world. Psyche was first of all human
and mortal—then she became divine. She was not a god born
into mortality as Christ was, but the other way around. A poetics
presided over by Psyche is a poetics in which the soul is born
from the physical, material world. We don't have to transcend
or destroy our mortality to become divine. The dualities of phenomenon
& numen, physical & metaphysical, reality & dream,
necessity & desire stand side by side, as do Eros and Psyche.
The need for a monotheist, monopolizing "oneness" can
be replaced with an acceptance of the diversity, duality and polymorphous
actuality of phenomenal existence.
|
Carolyn Zonailo Poetry
Canada Review
Fall 1987 |
Copyright by Carolyn Zonailo: www.carolynzonailo.com,
2004. |