Hawk and Songbird: Poems
I had never heard of Susan Cowger until I was asked to review Hawk and Songbird, her recently published books of poems, and I am so glad I was asked. These poems—there are more than seventy here–are not only well-made, but are brutally honest, rich in her presentation of the natural world, and marvelously imaginative as she draws metaphors from that world.
In a preface Cowger tells us that at the peak of the pandemic she was diagnosed with blood cancer (multiple myeloma). These poems are her response to that deep concern, and in most of them she comes to a point of submission to God—but not without a struggle. As she says in “Burning with Ash,”
I go after God striking my every word hard
Against every fatal edge And so we prove
Each other God’s steely smack of flint
Does not stop until a curl of my own heart ignites drops
Onto the char-cloth and I plead please dearest
tinder-nest of accrued prayer
catch a tiny spark
In “I Talk into My Hands” she writes:
I sing into the darkness with animal pain
A kind of wailing like coyote’s song
Where holding the high note means
Grateful something has died
Then she moves from that image to the image of Jesus crying out on the cross: “a tipping back of your head and the howl. / I howl back.”
In the poem “Claws” she uses the image of claws to describe the terrible pain she is experiencing but then, a bit later she glances out the window and sees V s of geese
Leaning upward
lofting onto updraft
as if flight is nothing
nothing at all
but what will happen
Also in the preface Cowger writes that “these poems are not answers to questions. The words herein ponder the way life & death fly above us, circle us, heckle & intimidate, exhaust faith.”
Almost all of Cowger’s imagery is drawn from the natural world even though she is confined to her bed much of the time. In “Holiest” Cowger describes a red-tail hawk soaring “amid the annoying hit and run of a songbird,” asks why, and says she has no answers. She can only “peck out a sound like joy” that asks “the strongest holiest thing in the sky/to look at me come after me/Help me.” That thing is a red-tail hawk, which for Cowger, becomes a symbol of God.
In “Too Close to My Eyes” she describes a dragonfly stalling and staring into her and then imagines telling of it to her Beloved “as if/ the love of God whispered to me/could mean anything at all/to you.” She is not so much disparaging her husband as she is telling the reader that in her sickness and pain she experiences bright, very personal, moments that are gifts from God.
“She Says You Get What You Get,” one of the few poems written from a third person perspective, gives a brutal self-portrait: “She props a gimpy leg,” accuses herself of “angling for God’s attention,” describes “another bruise blooming.” Then she asks–as most of us might also–that “Despite the defect/ now it’s hard to hate/ what she loves?”
Let me conclude with these lines from the next to last poem in this collection, “What Happened.” Early in the poem she describes “A larger circle/ of skull taken and not replaced right away” and then, a few lines later, getting “face to face with this now terrible God”:
how I climbed onto the bench
next to him edging onto his lap leaning
into the chest of Almighty and the pulse
of that heartbeat the twining
meander of a single note
an unchangeable key
a hail to me alone
a presence
that cannot be folded
or managed more like a smell a seasoning
seeping into and through
my being . . . .
I bow in awe before lines like these and, of course, before this God who is so present, so very present in the life of this poet, Susan Cowger.
I appreciate your review of the poems in Hawk and Songbird: Poems as Charlie and I enjoyed reading your poems each morning.
Thank you, Dave Schelhaas, for this review. Not only have you accurately described my method and motivation. You hold the words in your palm and cause others to feel the heartbeat. It is as if you have been in my head looking out through my eyes…or perhaps you have been near a window beholding a similar view.
I borrow from the Asians–a bow to you.