Mycological Studies
by Jay Millar
Coach House Books, 2002
Reviewed by Ben Lyle
Bedard
" ‘To mushroom,’"
Canadian poet, Jay
Millar, writes in his Preface to Mycological
Studies, "means literally ‘to develop explosively,’ surely
a fine way of thinking about a desire to write, a sudden urge to
commune. Writing as an ongoing process, living in the letter, might
create a general slowdown in the process we understand as life". To
read Mycological Studies is to experience another rhythm of life,
a slower, more careful, more communal existence as Jay Millar seeks to
grasp the tones of another mode of living on earth: the one of
mushrooms. One of Pound’s first poems, written for his then
sweetheart, HD, tantalizes the reader with the thought of the
imagination of a tree, of the lessons one derives from such an act of
the imagination. "Nathless I have been a tree amid the wood/And
many a new thing understood/That was rank folly to my head before,"
Pound writes in "The Tree." What those lessons were, however,
is an enigma left romantically unexplored. (It being Pound, however, one
wishes he had remembered his education better.) In Mycological
Studies, Millar investigates this trans-species communication,
finding communal ground between the fungus and the human in the process
of writing.
"Shall I not have
intelligence with the earth?" asks Thoreau in Walden.
"Am I not partly leaves and vegetable mould myself?" The act
of stepping out of one’s skin into another’s perception is a common
tactic for the poetic mind. In 80 Flowers, Zukofsky had the
imagination and the courage to imagine the vehicle for this motion
outwards to be language, the concrete ability of words to create
connections, not only between the reader and the writer, but between the
writer and reality itself, the world of stones and flowers and
mushrooms. Millar’s project in Mycological Studies is an
investigation of the world, using not only language but both process and
page to "commune" with the fungal world:
who thinks they’re
trying to communicate?
who communicates to
trying their thinks?
Millar writes, "it is
the possibility of language offered by appearance/in the present that
fascinates". This relationship is the propulsive energy of the
book. Divided into three parts with an appendix, Mycological Studies
offers different pathways in the investigation of our relationship to
the natural world. The first part of the book is written in
conventional-looking lines, with the use of bold text to give the
surface a texture that undulates with an ethereal fecundity, as if these
bold letters were spores waiting to erupt out of the fertile earth of
the book. When the second book opens, the reader is pleasantly shocked
to see the world of the book exploded into white space. The affect is
beautifully organic, as if we were watching the quiet but pervasive
action of growth and realizing it as a process of creating identities,
each with its own margins, its own white-bounded integrity.
imaginary sprouting
somewhere with nothing
This line appears at the
head of the page while the bottom ends it with the following line, after
a chasm of aching whiteness:
the language to
tell you where you are
What is sprouting here is
not just words, or even language, but the page itself as a communicative
form. Or, as Millar puts it in his poem "Being There,"
"what was going on was nothing/put into words." The
meaning sprouts from Millar’s care with the space of the page and a
sensitivity to its ability to be expressive. Unlike Zukofsky’s 80
Flowers, Millar is not captured by language or bounded by it. The
page itself is just as expressive for this poet than the words
themselves¾ perhaps, at times, more. The use of the page in the book
seems to offer as important a groundwork as the mushroom’s experience
of the earth itself. The page becomes more than just a passive vehicle
for meaning, but a connection of itself, another method for the study
and appreciation for another species on the planet.
The appendix of the book
demonstrates the full capability of this kind of interrogation (or
cooperation) with the world as it exists about us. Called "XXVI
Fungal Threads," one for each letter of the alphabet, the poems
mimic first shape, then meaning in a wonderful pairing of poems. The top
poem, using only letters, draws out a fungal thread while the bottom
poem articulates those letters into words and poems. The relationship
acts as a metaphor of the poet to the object, giving the process
meaning, and further complicating the nature of such a project. Visually
engaging, these threads operate in relation to each other as a process
of the mind, a mind searching for understanding, true mimicry that has
nothing to do with mimesis.
Millar’s theme of
absence of language as a viable conduit for meaning, continues in his
work, both old and new, though in Mycological Studies it
seems to reach an apogee. In his 2005 collection, False Maps For
Other Creatures, published by Nightwood Editions, Millar writes,
"so many/landscapes exist/to push through//the foliage and grasp/a
natural absence/of words//caught like a leaf/when it falls/the structure
understands". In his poem series "Some Notes on Bird
Song," from his 1998 collection, The Ghosts of Jay MillAr published
by Coach House, Millar identifies language as both a method and a way of
seeking connection:
Because Language is the
bridge between bodies, (a light swoop upon the air)
that hoop which houses
the mind, it is a bird house, whose sexual wings are
perched upon those
branches. It should be made clear that this language cares
nothing for orientation,
gender, age, species, or race. It is exactly like what it is like
to be with another
person. If you call the right notes, someone is there who can
answer.
Millar’s preoccupation
with both the permeation of language in our lives and the seeming
absence of it in the natural world explains the diversity of Mycological
Studies. On one page, only a sentence may appear, or the poem may
exist under a temple’s weight of white space above it. On another, the
eye is struck by a wall of words, a deluge of articulation as Millar
grasps another set of tools and tries again to create those ephemeral
connections which only poetry can provide us.
The third part of Mycological
Studies, "Unidentified Species," is an example of Millar’s
comfort with words, his eagerness to use it. The third section offers us
a block of justified text in which we delve into the dark world of
fungi. Here, careful and slow, Millar moves into a world we cannot know,
using the imagination of language to push into a realm wholly foreign to
us:
elongation roots yuppie
action roots dimpled honest elongation
roots honest elongation
roots rigid imitation glimpse
honest tells elongation
yuppie elongation on dimpled
doorway therfor how real
our wind sleeps logic united
The rhythmic qualities of
the work seem to suggest growing (elongation) while the use of ‘imitation’
and ‘honest’ bring to mind the fractal quality of the organic world,
its method of growth being one of replication, making all things the
same, like, Millar tells us with a smile, a "yuppie action,"
wearing the same clothes, driving the same vehicles, and using the same
words. With these worlds as tools, Millar offers us insight into the
fungal world¾ and into the nature of our relations with the natural
world of landscapes, birds, and mushrooms.
Millar demonstrates to us
that if we are to learn to question the nature of our relationship with
the world, we must learn the process of communing with the inarticulate,
or, to put it differently, the alien articulations of other species, the
song of bird, the opening of flowers, or the growth of mushrooms.
Science has discovered the language of bacteria and has taken pictures
of wavelengths of light invisible to the human eye. What science cannot
do, however, is the kind of work that Millar does in Mycological
Studies. Science has no interest in the relationships which poetry
uncovers, precisely because it is otherwise inexpressible, found only by
the desire and sympathy to create connections between ourselves and the
world that created us. Science needs its utterable facts. Only poetry
understands that it is the moment of connection that reveals to us the
uncompromising complexity of the world and how, for a moment, we may
comprehend our part within it as in Whitman’s spider-like soul,
"Ceaselessly musing, venturing, throwing, seeking the spheres to
connect them,/Till the bridge you will need be form’d, till the
ductile anchor hold,/Till the gossamer thread you fling catch somewhere,
O my soul."
Poetry, Millar
demonstrates, is satisfied with nothing at all. A page gone absolutely,
articulately blank.
Ben Lyle
Bedard grew up in Maine, studied creative writing first at the
University of Maine at Farmington where he later served as acting
director of Alice James Books, and then at Mills College where he
received his MFA. He is now pursuing his doctorate at the University of
Buffalo. His poetry has appeared in BlazeVOX, fhole, Damn the Caesars,
Yellow Edenwald Field, and P-Queue. His adaptation of the
Ugaritic epic KRT appeared in Ninth Letter. His reviews of poetry
have appeared in Artvoice and Jacket. |