POSTED ON OCTOBER 24, 2007:
Rafael Campo rescues language and meaning from politics
Beaten metaphors
The Enemy
By Rafael Campo
Duke University Press, 99 pp.
![]() Rafael Campo |
The debate between free verse versus New Formalism has often been cast as the freedom fighters versus the forefathers, long-haired Whitmaniacs versus uptight syllable counters. But Campo's pulsing meter is simply his mode of poetic expression, not a loyalty oath to traditional values: He uses it advantageously in such poems as "Patriotic Poem," where the continual beat keeps things moving quickly, mirroring the rush to war. The poem gets at the crux of the political issue from the viewpoint most sacred to a poet: the abuses of the English language, the manipulated words, the complacent media and the quiet masses. "A metaphor lay beaten in the street/ while moonlight bathed it in white tears. The war/ on words had been declared, in language none/ could contradict."
Campo's strength as a poet comes in recognizing that the political is very much the personal. In his poem "Defense of Marriage," he describes a simple evening in the garden, one of many in the long, 20-year engagement of a gay couple, the night before gay marriage was legalized in Massachusetts. The poem ends simply, "I felt tired, and it would soon be dark/ but none can refuse love, not even us." It is with this kind, quiet spirit that a political issue becomes simply evidence of love. In his forms, the rhyme is soft, often slant, so a reader may not realize they've just read a sonnet or a pantoum (a Malaysian verse form similar to a villanelle), and it is with this same refreshing quietness that Campo explores the very human side of political issues.
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But the book has its lighter moments, like the felicitously titled poem "Ode to the Man Incidentally Caught in the Photograph of Us on My Desk," or the summer section in the poem "Changing Seasons," which reads "Four swans glide past, ignoring rusted signs/ that warn ice skating strictly prohibited," or the moment of awkwardness in a doctor noticing a patient's striped boxer shorts.
And it is this possibility of lightness over darkness that Campo, speaking for our time, leaves us with in the collection's final words, a timeless prayer: Grant us peace.
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