Mark Wunderlich’s The Earth Avails is a book
of verse that feels as if it was written under duress, as if he composed these
poems while the brute fact of the world had one hand pulling back his head,
exposing his throat to God, while the other was a fist pressed into his back:
Meat.
Bristled hide that can’t be called skin
never
skin—too bristled for that, too dry.
Hooves
dainty as a doe’s. Furred ears.
Rusty
wool along the belly. Their shape
sharp
and narrow, an axe of muscle,
bottled
urge. Two tusks sickle up
from
the split of a whiskery maw.
Here
at the game farm, they mill and snuffle,
tear
the corn shuck bale to bits. Pigeons
and
sparrows make the atmosphere overhead,
chipping
at the air, cobwebbed beams.
These
beasts do not doze the way a pork chop
hog
will doze, like a meat pie on a concrete plate.
Here,
the piglets daubed in racing stripes
clamp
their nozzles to a tit
sucking
with sleepless vigor
while
the boar eases out a penis big as my wrist.
(from “Wild Boar”)
The poems in The Earth Avails relentlessly tease out the
interplay of perception between animals and humans. Whether he’s encountering a
resentful ram, a diseased coyote, a hooked sand-shark, a misfit raccoon, a hive
of bees, or even a lounging cat, the poet not only sees these creatures
possessing abstract mythic properties, but also startling tactile ones. Since
we are barred from animal consciousness, how an animal lives in our
imagination always collides (at least for Wunderlich) with the hard fact of
that animal:
Once
he knocked me down
with
a blow to my hip, three hundred pounds
and
a thick skull crashed against my pelvis.
Sprawled
in the mud and dung
I
pulled myself through straw
while
he backed up for another run.
Before
he could I hit him
with
a broken rail, cracked it
across
his nose. He barely noticed.
Now
he regards me
with
golden ovine eyes,
rich
with a pastoral flame.
(from “Ram”)
The painful physicality of these encounters
will strike many readers as foreign. We’re more
likely to wrestle with unread emails in our inbox than a pissed off ram. In poem after poem, one realizes that The Earth Avails is a book about pain played out on a georgic stage. And not just
physical pain. Spiritual pain is treated with the same severity as his portraits of manual labor, and Wunderlich relies on old
religious and folk forms (prayers and letters essentially that the poet discovered tucked
away in his family’s home in Wisconsin or in various libraries) that provide a stunning reply to the poems about difficult work. Where those poems explore the triangulated camaraderie between animal and landscape and person, in these other poems we're shown the utterance of prayer is
an exclusively human behavior, an animal cry refined in language. In Wunderlich’s universe, prayer isn’t only a
reaction to suffering, but an expression of it, as we see in this poem where the speaker petitions
God to remind him why life's drudgery has purpose:
Part the curtain and let me glimpse
your gleaming hem.
Remind me that behind this knotted taperstry
of tasks and humiliations
is a shining world that must remain hidden
so it may remain unspoiled.
(from "A Servant's Prayer")
-John Ebersole
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