From Ways of Going
for Steve
Will it be like paragliding**--**
gossamer takeoff, seedlike drifting down
into a sunlit, unexpected grove?
Or ski-jumping--headlong soaring,
ski-tips piercing clouds,
crystal revelations astonishing my goggles?
. . . . Skittery flicker of a glare-weary lizard
startled into the sheltering wings of a leaf,
rusting freighter with a brimming hold
shimmering onto a crimson edge. . . .
Sad rower pushed from shore,
I'll disappear like circles summoned
by an oar's dip.
However I burn through to the next atmosphere,
let your dear face be the last thing I see.
Whether writing poems about North American life and landscape; or love
poems; or elegies for family and friends; or poems on serious,
debilitating illness and the transformations it can effect--Elise
Partridge offers in Chameleon Hours words forged by suffering and
courage. Full of wit and empathy, Partridge's poems draw inspiration
from sources as whimsical as tortoises and pontoons, as poignant as a
homeless woman taking shelter inside a post office on a winter night,
and as deeply personal as her own cancer diagnosis at a young age.
Chameleon Hours is a book about the rewards of being reminded of one's
own mortality and the lyric expression of life in all its intensity. "In
their ample, embracing, nuanced appetite for sensory experience,
[Partridge's] poems achieve an ardent, compassionate and unsentimental
vision."--Robert Pinsky, Washington Post "Partridge's impressive
poems pursue a careful thinker's yearning for abandon, a loyal friend
and partner's wish for change. Attentive to fact, to what she sees and
knows, Partridge nonetheless makes space for what is wild, outside and
within us--for the fears and the blanks of chemotherapy, for sharp
variations within (and without) frames of metre and rhyme, and for the
welcome consistencies of married love. She has learned detail-work, and
patience, from Elizabeth Bishop, but she has made other virtues her own:
riffs on familiar phrases open startling vistas and even her love poems
get attractively practical. Hers is a welcome invitation: let's listen
in."--Stephen Burt "Reading Chameleon Hours, I find myself marveling
at the luck of each heron, mosquito, field of Queen Anne's Lace, each
person, place, thing or circumstance in this beautiful book, to have
Elise Partridge's exquisite and precise attention. And how lucky we are
to get to listen in as she offers each of them her flawless ear; the
book is full of understated sonic gems like 'a kickball straight into
pink lilac.' In 'Chemo Side Effects: Memory, ' after describing 'groping
in the thicket' for 'the word I want . . . scrabbling like a squirrel on
the oak's far side, ' she tells us 'I could always pull the gift / from
the lucky-dip barrel; scoop the right jewel / from my dragon's trove. .
. .' We of course already know this. It's evident in every one of these
poems."--Jacqueline Osherow
Praise for Fielder's Choice
"Partridge is a technical wizard for whom thinking and feeling are not
separate activities. She is a hawk-like observer of the particular . . .
many times ascending to pitch-perfect verse."--Ken Babstock, Globe and
Mail (Canada)