What He Ought to Know
Ed Foster
Marsh Hawk Press 2006
New year's first book, a day early. Ed Foster's poetry has new contacts, more lookin' at boys, more dedications, more dears (Dear A., Dear Levantine, Dear Wunderbar, David, dear), more ohs (Oh, Ted; Oh, Gene; Oh, David), more propositioning. These conversion narratives are not postmodern but they are embedded in watched over, opened intonations -- "Marilyn erred (said David)"; " language you remember, / Henry said, quoting Auden." Intimacy to a degree, rapacious, bookish, still a contrary stoicism reveals dark emblazonments of self-doubt in titles like "Our Dossier of Loss" and "The Pointless Life We Lead." In the poem titled "Ekhardt's Ice" Foster pinpoints another pervasive element, an ogler's detachment, "Like Ekhardt," but Foster seems ready to let this go. Here the narrator cites Spicer's "Ahhhh" and "the boy" who yells "Fisssh"; then the narrator thinks "spring seems just / another determined thing." Why resort to Spicer or "the boy" for permission to shout and then reflect like this, so pared back, detached? The finest poems are rowdier, calling Buddhist piety to task, sizing up bliss as "nothing new," giving form to "swell, tight bright anger in my bed." While Foster also cites Death in Venice, Melville, and even W. V. Quine, it's more engaging when he shuts down his lover at 3 a.m., notes the next day the waiter needs a shave, lingers waiting for French teens who don't return. Sometimes Foster refuses to slice the veils -- "The athlete, too young by western standards for what he'd want" -- what wanting jock is too young? western standards? Still, the manhunt is a persistent measure composing the narrator as Everyman in pursuit of his younger self, the voyeur-participant: "Styles change...There was / a time women might look svelte...No more…Boys occupy my stage...The metric lives on pleasure / for the eye." The eye, the boys, mere metonyms (for Foster), poetry fills the stage. (It can live no other way.) The most evasive of these "new and selected poems" come from Mahrem (2002) again from Marsh Hawk Press. Not all of that collection is included here. I miss the predatory overture of "Men Who Threaten Men" or the directness of "Love": "Take your prick in hand / and move it slowly. / Take his and / bring it to your mouth." Yet a selected poems is by definition a winnowing. For now, I'll settle for the treasure in reach, the unstable ambiguity of "Litany," for example, in which Foster unfastens a compressed, cross-generational auto-inventory of the once-family man, now afloat: "His orchids are inherited disease; / their purifying roots are white -- / he loves the petals / as the boy imagines skies / beneath his father's silk." These poems are poised as a cirrus sky, knottings of cadenced desire, unruly, "painted blue for love."