Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Black Gold and the Countryside



Although I enjoyed several pieces from the selection of place poems we are supposed to read for the upcoming lesson on Friday, there are two I particularly liked.

The first one is by Elizabeth Bishop and bears the title "Filling Station". The idea of a place which is evoked only by the first stanza is nothing but incredible – although the filling station in my imagination pretty soon turns into something darker, more industrialized, colossal; an oil rig out on the grey sea with engineers covered in black slime. "oil-soaked, oil-permeated to a disturbing, over-all black translucency." Are we still at a "little filling station"? To contrast the word "little" with the industrial monstrosity evoked by the repeated dark vowels has a strong effect. The consonances in the second stanza add an additional notion of danger: "and several quick and saucy and greasy sons assist him". It is daily work, sons helping out at the filling station, but Bishop's sharp s-sounds make it feel like a dangerous task (which it is – "Be careful with that match!"). What follows is a more accurate description of the place with balances out the over-the-top description of oil and greasy nature from the first stanzas and gives more shape to the actual place: "It has a cement porch behind the pumps, and on it a set of crushed and grease-impregnated wickerwork; on the wicker sofa a dirty dog, quite comfy." One can see the place now.

The other poem which struck me was "Lying in a Hammock at William Duffy's Farm in Pine Island, Minnesota", which keeps exactly what the title promises. Everyone who rested in the countryside before knows the described feeling of standstill, silence and how time can follow different rules outside of the city. Time is also what the last line of the poem is concerning with: "I have wasted my life" strikes with a unexpected heaviness into the described idyll. A sharp cut with makes you immediately want to reread the whole poem. And again you encounter pleasant and light alliterations like in "bronze butterfly" and rhythmically ringing "cowbells follow[ing] one another" (assonance). You lean back like the lyrical I – and the final line strikes again.    

1 comment:

  1. I completely agree on both parts here. Although, I almost feel as if Bishop's poem is not only a type of commentary on industrialization. It's kind of like she's using the filling station, its danger, and grime to represent the family's dynamic as well. Also, in Wright's poem, I feel almost as if his last line not only brings himself back to reality, but the reader as well. I feel like I had wasted a minute of my life only reading about this place, let alone spending days (or even longer) on a farm where wasting time like that seems pretty restful.

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