Love Us" (49) art remains a constant
and it is reassuring that poems are reliable even if people
and life are not. But in "Nature Versus Art" (56) :
"Permanence is a dream, the eternal/something we will never
know" (56).
he last poem in the
section"In the House of No" (63) gives the final answer: it
affirms the positive power of poetry to say "no" to evil
people and practices:
Our strategy is simple:
we say no to everything you offer
until the end of time.
And this brings me back to Dudek.
"In the House of No" seems to show
Norris choosing art over life, but in "Coming Through," the
last part of the book, he turns the tables to show that art
is important because it affirms life. I agree with Dudek
that in this book "the triumph is in the recording of the
tension," but I do not agree that "the danger is always the
possibility of rejecting art," and more importantly, I do
not think Norris agrees either. The danger lies in losing
life in a sterile illusion of art's autonomy.
he book ends with five
powerful odes which indicate that Norris has "come
through.". The first is addressed to his daughter and rivals
"Frost at Midnight" as an expression of parental love and
concern. The next four--"Ode Against Sadness" (83), "Ode to
Joy" (84-85), "Ode to the Day" (86), and "Ode to the Common
Man" (87-90) are all written "after Neruda" and all are
affirmative, travelling in a widening circle of hope and
love from one particular individual, his daughter, to
embrace the whole race.
 
|