David Cope's fifth book, Silences for Love, is framed in elegies,
prophet Martin King to old friend Allen Ginsberg, opening with lights
fading & flaring over Lake Superior, closing with one leaf in the hidden
meadow. Here are the weary traveler & one-eyed boy, Gettysburg sundown,
sighs over Sarajevo & massacre at the Patriarch's tomb, snowstorm canoe
trip ending with a brother beneath Northern Lights-deaths & weddings,
reunions in companion love, Oklahoma City trail of tears, asking
blessing to learn healing. Here too are long silence & welcome home: in
aging harlequin & his gypsy, in the runes of the Two-Hearted River, in
dreams & visions going & coming, memory of a lost friend trapped on
corpse detail, rush hour traffic jam, old bridge & hidden meadow,
snowstorm near-death car crash, old friend fired hence with a last call
for love, free clothes, & newly unfurling leaf.
Silences for Love also offers "skillful technique, attention to minute
particulars & variable foot," continuing to extend the demotic
traditions of American poetry established by Walt Whitman, William
Carlos Williams, and Charles Reznikoff.