Re: spells and charms To Mark Doty --
by
Mark Doty
11/12/2008, 12:28 AM #
Robert, that's weirdly coincidental. The world's bound together by luminous threads, sure enough.
Here's the Roethke poem in question:
My Papa's Waltz
The whiskey on your breath
Could make a small boy dizzy;
But I hung on like death:
Such waltzing was not easy.
We romped until the pans
Slid from the kitchen shelf;
My mother's countenance
Could not unfrown itself.
The hand that held my wrist
Was battered on one knuckle;
At every step you missed
My right ear scraped a buckle.
You beat time on my head
With a palm caked hard by dirt,
Then waltzed me off to bed
Still clinging to your shirt.
While it's true that contemporary readers can hardly help but read Roethke's lyric through the lens of our moment's familiar narratives of addiction and the dysfunctional, I still think this poem's a long ways from a warm evocation of family fun. Look at the word choice: dizzy, death, unfrown, battered, scraped, hard. There's real tenderness in it, especially in those last two lines, but they don't erase "I hung on like death." And of course that's the great power of the poem, that Roethke has it both ways at once, which really does capture something of what many people feel toward their parents, that mix of devotion and fear. That polarity's the fuel that makes the poem go, and that's certainly true of the exhilaratingly creepy poem you posted, too.