'Splitting an Order' offers poetry that outshines dark days
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As December draws to a close, many people think about endings, the future, and celebrating light during the darkest days of the year. If that includes you, consider greeting 2015 with a copy of Ted Kooser鈥檚 Splitting an Order, a quiet collection that honors small victories and gives reasons to be hopeful.
The book 鈥 Kooser鈥檚 13th full-length collection of poems 鈥 introduces all of those elements in the first pages before exploring them at length in the next three sections.聽
Kooser fans will recognize his trademark compassion and plain-spoken wisdom in the initial poems, which form a series of gray- and white-haired portraits. Here, an elderly father and son walk down stairs together, their fingers interlaced in affection and strength. A long-married couple shares a simple meal, along with practiced patience. A woman celebrating her 110th birthday glides to the celebration 鈥渋n a chair with sparkling carriage wheels,鈥 riding 鈥渋nches above/ the world鈥檚 hard surface, up where she belongs,/ safe from the news.鈥
Those stories, tinged with melancholy, show the dignity and perseverance of their subjects. Every poem contains several lines that uplift both the anecdote and the reader. Kooser also intersperses more youthful scenes 鈥 a little girl swinging between her parents, a young woman swooshing by on inline skates 鈥 creating a rich canvas where experience and innocence are equally moving.
From there, Kooser shifts his attention from people to things and animals. The second section explores time and the past, beginning with a long poem called 鈥淓state Sale.鈥 As the speaker moves from one item to another, he ponders ideas and tools that have been discarded through passing decades. A broken bird feeder, a baseball split at the seams, a wristwatch with 鈥渁 cracked leather band鈥 have all lost their former glory. Yet Kooser鈥檚 careful, compassionate view gives them and other forgotten items a different kind of worth and dignity. Wing imagery and ocean references help transform the scene, little by little, until readers and the poem arrive at an antique gilded harp, 鈥渋ts dusty strings like a curtain/ drawn over the silence,/ stroked by fingers of light.鈥
The third section starts gloriously, as if Kooser鈥檚 willingness to see beyond the surface in previous parts has led to new beginnings.
The poem 鈥淎t a Kitchen Table,鈥 one of the best in the book, opens like a new year with stories that 鈥渁rrive at dusk,/ in pairs, quietly/ creating themselves/ in the feathery light.鈥 These tales arrive not with fancy plumage but 鈥渨ith a plain little song./ Theirs are the open wings/ we light our table by.鈥
Readers will feel that light in the next poem as well, as Kooser describes the natural world coming to life in early spring and realizes more than once that there will be 鈥淣o other day/ like this one, not ever again.鈥 That bittersweet recognition leads to the poem鈥檚 powerful last sentence: 鈥淭his is my life,/ none other like this.鈥 The speaker then shifts direction again, recalling childhood memories of his father, the way people create the past in their own minds, and his unsuccessful first marriage.
Some readers might wish for more light at this point, or wonder why the poet has reverted to sad memories. The book鈥檚 final pages answer that question and make a point everyone should remember as 2014 draws to a close: Feeling hopeful is easy when there are no big losses or shocks to challenge one鈥檚 perspective. But when major cracks weaken a person鈥檚 foundation, he or she must decide what kind of outlook will guide moving forward.
Much of the fourth section is a prose piece, recounting the horror and grief Kooser felt after learning that a teenage boy had been murdered in the house where he, his first wife, and their baby used to live. That violent act seemed to taint key memories and destroy part of the past.
As the speaker describes the cellar he used as a study, the orange shag carpet, and the couple鈥檚 鈥渕ost ordinary unhappiness,鈥 he mentally inhabits those familiar rooms again and restores, in some measure, the place he knew.
Yet Kooser, always full of surprises, doesn鈥檛 end with that. Instead, he closes 鈥淪plitting an Order鈥 with a short poem in which he compares his right hand to a chicken that pecks her way across the paper and pulls him along 鈥渁cross more than seventy years, a sometimes/ muddy, sometimes frozen barnyard/ where, looking back, it seems that every day/ was rich with interest, both underfoot/ and just an inch or two ahead of that.鈥
That鈥檚 a perspective worth carrying into the new year.
Elizabeth Lund reviews poetry for the Monitor and The Washington Post.