“The Garden” Jay Hopler

1 post

Jay Hopler’s Green Squall: Awash With Light and Color

According to the notes, the title poem of Jay Hopler’s book comes from green squall, or rashmahanic (West Indian Creole), which means unruly or unruly behavior. As this poetry collection is mainly concerned with gardens and is introduced by one of the author’s poetry teachers, Louise Glück, who counted herself a fan of gardens in verse, maybe the title tips its hat to plants’ rather unruly habits (including weeds, of course, which sprout up in any poetry collection, no matter how pretty).

Sadly, we lost Jay Hopler in 2022 to metastatic prostate cancer at age 51 (this is where we say, Too young!). This book, winner of the Yale Younger Poets prize, came out in 2006, however. The opening number signals Hopler’s willingness to play with words and parts of speech the way Dylan Thomas once did:

The Garden

    And the sky!

Nooned with the steadfast blue enthusiasm

Of an empty nursery.

Crooked lizards grassed in yellow shade.

The grass was lizarding,

Green and on a rampage.

 

Shade tenacious in the crook of a bent stem.

 

Noon. This noon –

Skyed, blue and full of hum, full of bloom.

The grass was lizarding.

 

Here, in a classic “morning” poetry form, Hopler invokes both plants and sunlight:

 

Aubade

 

1

Standing next to a large white pot

Filled to overflowing with orange

And yellow snapdragons, my old

Coonhound looks across the dew-

Strewn lawn at the magnolia tree.

Suddenly, from somewhere deep

 

Within the squall of all those big

And sloppy blossoms, a desolate

 

Call rings out.

 

2

 

This morning, still

And warm, heavy with the smells

 

Of gardenia and Chinese wisteria,

The first few beams of spring sun-

 

Light filtering through the flower-

Crowded boughs of the magnolia,

I cannot conceive a more genuine,

More merciful, form of happiness

 

Than solitude.

 

3

 

In a single, black and ragged line,

The shadow of the magnolia tree

 

Draws nearer to the flower pots.

The coonhound lowers her snout

 

To its dark edge –. What was it

We heard call out so mournfully?

To what heartbreak would a call

Like that be heir? The air is still,

 

But differently.

 

 

 

 

Nature, once a bountiful source, has been relegated to darker quarters in poetry these days. It lies east of Eden while the garden is given over to identity: cultural, political, and social issues of the day. If you need a break from modern fads, you can do worse than take a walk through Hopler’s Green Squall. The poetry may lean unruly, but overall, the sights and smells should please you.