Review by Martin Abramson
THE HEARTBREAK AT THE HEART OF THINGS
By Vince Clemente
Seventh Quarry Press, Swansea, Wales
$15.00,
50 pp, Paper
By permission of Book/Mark Quarterly
The things Vince Clemente
loves about John Hall Wheelock, are the things I love about Clemente: an
empathic ear for human situations; a weather eye for the most delicate
exemplars of nature; a mind attuned to the mysteries of being. Mr. Clemente’s
ability to see the tragic glory buried beneath both natural phenomena and the
human soul is plainly implied in the title of this collection.
Most of the studies in Heartbreak arise from long,
contemplative walks along the restless shores and “alluvial mudflats” of the Atlantic
coast of Long Island which he calls by its Algonquin name: Paumanok. American
Indian names resonate for Clemente: Shinnecock; Nissequague; Mattituck;
Connetquot; Peconic: place names on any map of the island.
Sometimes alone, often
with his wife and lifetime companion, Annie, he wanders the fields and forests
above Long Island Sound. Living in Sag Harbor, he has easy access to both
bodies of water.
As a nature poet,
Clemente is gifted with the idiosyncratic word-hoard used to describe in ever
novel ways the minute details of living creatures and local flora. Mr. Clemente
often calls his talent ‘small’, but if so, it is a vast smallness replete with
the prismatic hues and ripe musk of this world. A deeply spiritual intuition
guides his pen. Every line a reflection of God’s glory.
Here’s a bouquet of
images: lilac rain; apricot light; aspen fingers viscous with pine pitch; tarn
deep well; breastplate of sleek eelfare; monk-bent forsythia; dusk’s pollen
glow; sun a lavender wingbar; tundra petals; aluminum sky; moraine of vowel. He
finds endless flowers: gentian; trillium; iris; columbine; spartina. And from
the sea: blues saunter in a tidal pool; shell-hoard/ of whelks & limpet,
periwinkle, conch.
The religious motif recurs throughout this volume:
nuns at vespers; canonical matins; River Gods; souls of lost children; the
Lord’s aspen fingers; the barn owl…chittering a song of creation; kneel in the
morning; bathe as Eve did. The poet finds epiphanies in “a girl washing her
hair in a rain/ barrel at sunset” and feels remorse over a doe wounded by an
arrow or a tanager colliding with a window.
He understands why
Hawkins, a neighbor, having lost a daughter, carefully builds a nest for wood
ducks. “A Circle of Meadow” links a grassy habitat the poet has left untouched,
reserved for avian life, with another vibrant image: the memory of an
intellectually acquisitive boy who ransacked the libraries of Brooklyn and
scattered verbal riches “through Brooklyn streets” and “under the Brighton
Express”. But it is the adult, for whom
“the granary of love” is rededicated, which “as a swallow, drawn to the
clearing, drinks from my heart/fissured as it is”.
In addition to Wheelock,
Clemente pays homage to several contemporary poets, all from New England:
Whitman, Thoreau; Kerouac; W.C.Williams and Karl Shapiro. In “Francis, Here My
Hand” , he acknowledges a deeply felt communion with St.Francis and the “small,
helpless things” the saint loved:
the child scaling
the womb’s
walls…
…the foal
licking its
mother…
the field mouse
scurrying
for cover…
the barn owl
leaning
in its nest…
the
solemn cry
of earthly
things
stirring to Be:
In everyday
life, Professor Clemente maintains a steady correspondence with poets worldwide
and has hundreds of letters and signed volumes to show for it. He often
publishes appreciations of noted English and Irish poets. As American poetry
editor for The Seventh Quarry, he
still exerts a powerful influence on the nurture of fledgling poets.
Professor Clemente is a
chthonic force from the smoldering core, reanimating a landscape made prosaic
by malls and gas stations. He turns back the clock, restoring Paumanok’s
Algonquin demesne to it’s original freshness and wonder. The pre-Columbian
earth breathes in his poems and for the space of an hour’s perusal, he takes us
there.
Reprinted
from Book/Mark A Quarterly Small Press
Review, Spring 2013.
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