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Moving Through Color: Rita Dove's Thomas and Beulah published in Kentucky Philological Review 14 (1999): 27-31. Abstract Dove's poetry, unlike that of many of her contemporaries, looks backward toward the period of high modernism for its techniques. She relies on methods like ellipsis, imagistic detail, and depth of symbolism to convey her meaning. Because of these methods, it is difficult to get a precise critical grip on her poetry, for these techniques are necessarily so subtle that they are easily missed. Perhaps this explains the relative dearth of critical attention given to her work. Her Pulitzer Prize-winning 1986 collection, Thomas and Beulah, is the poetic story of the lives of her grandparents. Dove's explicit instructions that these poems are to be experienced together in a certain order demonstrates her eagerness to control our interpretation of this volume, and makes this collection of lyrics read like a narrative. The poet's insistence on controlled interpretation also emphasizes two important gestures within the text: the idea of reading backwards to receive a code and apply it, and the idea of color, in all of its racial manifestations, as a progression to be lived through. Article Rita Dove's Pulitzer Prize-winning 1986 collection, Thomas and Beulah, is the poetic story of the lives of her grandparents. After a dedication to her mother, on the dedication page, the reader is told in boldface type that, "These poems tell two sides of a story and are meant to be read in sequence." Dove's explicit instructions that these poems are to be experienced together in a certain order demonstrates her eagerness to control our interpretation of this volume, and makes this collection of lyrics read like a narrative. The collection itself is divided into two sections, "Mandolin," which tells the story of her grandfather, and "Canary in Bloom," which is the tale of her grandmother. The poet's insistence on controlled interpretation also emphasizes two important gestures within the text: the idea of reading backwards to receive a code and apply it, and the idea of color, in all of its racial manifestations, as a progression to be lived through. Dove's poetry, unlike that
of many of her contemporaries, looks backward toward the period of
high modernism for its techniques. She relies on methods like ellipsis,
imagistic detail, and depth of symbolism to convey her meaning. Because
of these methods, it is difficult to get a precise critical grip on
her poetry, for these techniques are necessarily so subtle that they
are easily missed. Perhaps this explains the relative dearth of critical
attention given to her work. While critics marvel at what she does,
scholarship has yet to tell us exactly how she does what she does.
1 At the end of the poem Dove mentions water twice (23 and 27). This water is interesting for what has already been said of it above in line 10, and for what happens to it in the final line of the poem. The water contains the two opposite colors of white and black. But these two are gently mixed together to create some color that is neither dark nor light, but rather gray. This color serves as a touchstone for the color imagery of the entire book that follows this crucial poem. Just as Lem's death sits like a specter above Thomas' life with Beulah, so too does gray sit behind all other colors. But this gray is not drab or tepid. Rather, it is a collection of opposites fused together. As such, it possesses the strengths of both black and white. Again and again throughout this book, Dove uses gray to show the dance between black and white. One other color is, at first glance, oddly placed in this poem because it doesn't seem to have racial significance. The silver of Thomas' voice is usually seen on a color wheel as a gray with more reflective qualities. This silver/gray, however, possesses the strength of shirred black and white. But it also contains something extra, an ability to reflect on its own nature, and on the nature of those around it. This is the ultimate description of Thomas' voice, especially when, later in the volume, he produces reflective music with the mandolin. While this gray possesses the dynamism and self-consciousness that have characterized the relationship between black and white in the latter half of this century, Dove presents not the usual black/white tale, but a much more vivid one. In doing so, she utilizes an oddity of coloration which must be discussed before proceeding. Transparent or translucent objects are mentioned 37 times in these poems, accounting for the third largest "color" group. These transparent or translucent images do not possess a color of their own. Rather, they show the color of objects behind them. Dove creates a color that has no color at all. Examples of such are bodies or glasses of water, windows, cellophane, Scotch tape, or other clear or slightly opaque objects. This color participates in the colors around it just as the silver/gray reflects the colors surrounding it. A breakdown of the colors Dove uses shows, on a very literal level, how she reaches beyond stereotypical color usage. Her first three predominant colors, white (59 references), yellow (54 references), and transparent/translucent are three colors that are obvious, deliberate choices for her. Black and brown appear far less frequently in the poetry. If Dove were overtly concerned with racial overtones, we would expect some kind of juxtaposition between black and white. Instead, the reader gleans a concern for something beyond race, a rapprochement, a movement, as I will now discuss, toward clarity and understanding. The main character of the first half of the volume is associated with a specific color. Dove continually presents Thomas' yellow scarf. Even when he is not wearing it, it is used as a strap for his mandolin hanging on the wall. Of course, he is portrayed as what he is, a black man. But his constant association with the color yellow casts a different light upon him. Dove carries this color throughout the first half of the collection, but it is not until this first half has ended that she gives us a way to decode the color. The first poem in the "Canary in Bloom" section, "Taking in Wash," gives us the code to read the colors of the first section. This reading backward in order to interpret previous imagery is a fascinating exercise that Dove continually demands of her reader in order to gain a full understanding of the poems. For example, the reader does not learn of Lem's death, which occurs in "The Event," until much later in the volume. In the same way, the reader does not learn the code for interpretation of the yellow color symbolism in the "Mandolin" section until that section is over. Understanding the way color is used in this poem is a first step to decoding the color of the "Mandolin" section. The first color in the poem is Beulah's father's nickname for her: "Pearl" (1). This color, appropriately enough, sets the tone for the rest of the poem. A black woman is called something white, not in some attempt to deny her race, but in a verbal embrace of affection, respect, and love. Beulah's father's coloration is then described. His skin paled in winter, moving from the brown of buckeyes to the yellow of ginger root (3-5). Beulah's mother accounts for this through an appeal to his mixed racial heritage. It is the Cherokee in him that creates such a movement. Beulah's father does not move toward whiteness on a metaphorical level, as his daughter does through his naming of her. Rather, he becomes paler in actuality. After showing white and green as seasonal images (10), the narrator claims that Beulah is "Papa's girl," even though she is black (11-12). This linking together of the two characters includes Beulah in this progression from black to yellow, from darkness to vibrancy. The white winter quickly countermands the blackness that precedes it (13). During the time when Beulah's father turned yellow, Beulah herself turned to the silver/gray of a mirror, which reflected her blackness. The final colors in the poem dance around one another in a symmetrical way that is reflected in the actions occurring in the poem at that time. Beulah's mother and father are fighting, for he is drunk and she is doing someone else's laundry, an act that infuriates him. There is obviously tension here, delicately understated by Dove, but manifested nonetheless in the battle between her colors. First we see the whiteness of the arctic and the hankies (18-19). The final two images are in opposition to this whiteness. Mama is a dark fist (23), and she unleashes her fury in a biblical allusion, swearing to defend her daughter by cutting Papa down like a brown cedar of Lebanon (26). These two colors, each reinforced through duplication, swirl around a central color. Mama stands upon an embroidered red rose, right in the middle of black and white. The clash of these two may produce blood, or it may produce beauty. Whichever they bring forth, one color does not overpower another. They mix together, like the shirred water of "The Event," to create another color that possesses its own strength. Papa's color does not move toward its opposite. Mama's color does not move at all. Beulah's blackness is called white by her father, and reflected back upon her by the silver/gray mixture of black and white. Black and white then dance together to create something different from both of them. Here we see Thomas linked to Beulah's father through the color yellow. At first, Thomas wears his yellow around his neck, either a sign of authority and favor or a yoke of burden. But then the mandolin moves to the wall; Thomas removes his yellow, which is more than Beulah's father can do. While both are able to move beyond blackness, Thomas alone can control his movement. Beulah's father is at the mercy of the winter, with its snow and harrowing white light. Thomas, on the other hand, can pick up or put down his new color. In some small way, then, he possesses more control over his destiny than any other significant male in the volume. Moving backward again to
the last poem which features Thomas, we can see his final color progression.
"Thomas at the Wheel" is the typically
understated description of Thomas' death by heart attack. Here, in
the grip of death, Thomas moves beyond the yellow of this life to
the transparency of the next. Dove links the transparent/translucent
rainstorm that Thomas encounters to the river that Lem drowned in
(1). The black asphalt quickly gives way to the transparent glass
doors of a drugstore (4-5). Then this transparency becomes a part
of Thomas, as he feels his chest filling with water (9). He is a seed
pod floating on a transparent sea (16). He sees writing on the transparent
water, and the last thing he imagines is his wife opening a transparent
window and missing him (21-23). Thomas' movement toward yellow has
now, in death, gone beyond that particular color. He ends in a colorless
state, as if he were purged of color. Thomas' movement toward the
vibrancy and warmth of yellow is not invalidated. It is merely seen
as a step in a larger progression toward completion, wherein he allows
all colors to flow through him. The penultimate poem in the collection, "Company," contains a significant clue concerning the nature of this code of color. The poem begins with the color red, seen before as a sign of beauty or danger (3). This is quickly displaced by Beulah's own image, the yellow canary (4). The canary is pitted against Thomas's dominant symbol, the mandolin (4-5). Dove then brackets the green of spring, the silver of fish, and the red of sirens with two white images, moonlight and salt (6-11). But the most important passage in the poem follows, awash in the white light and flavor that precede it. Beulah makes a telling reference to her relationship with Thomas: "If this is code, / she tells him, listen: we were good, / though we never believed it" (11-13). Beulah validates their separate selves, their separate journeys and symbols, as well as their journey together. She encapsulates their lives, both apart and together, and calls them a code to be read and deciphered. The movement toward yellow can now be seen for what it truly is: a movement toward unity, toward strength, toward goodness. However, this is not Dove's final color code in this volume. "The Oriental Ballerina," like the section that it closes, calls up its first color in its title. It is significant that this title occurs immediately after Beulah's last words, as the final poem in the volume. In it, we have the culmination of all the color imagery in the collection. Its title gives us Thomas' and Beulah's color. This ballerina is dancing on a white carnation (1). She is not yet bathed in the yellow glow of daylight (3), coming through the transparent windows (4), for the walls are still black with darkness (4). Yet even in their blackness they are tinged with white ghosts of red gardenias (5-6). The ballerina dances on the wallpaper's white carnations in pink slippers (10-11). The background for these carnations is the color of brown grease, brown teabags, and brown walnut veneer (18-19). Meanwhile, in the Orient, people are taking off robes bedecked with red roses (21). The yellow sun finally comes through the transparent windows, and they become translucent (23-24). The yellow sun shines upon the bed, the transparent glass with a yellow straw in it next to the bed, and then on the white pillow and a white handkerchief (26-38). Parenthetically, the yellow of the Orient is bracketed with a silver/gray of mist (35-36). The ballerina then dances in a tunnel of white light, while all around her is black shadow (43-45). Beulah, her head on the white pillow, notices nothing else but this play between white and black (46-47). This is the last thing she sees before she dies. Dove presents here the interconnectedness of darkness and light, of black or brown and white. At first in the wallpaper, with its oppositional foreground and background, and finally in Beulah's perception of the ballerina and her surroundings, Dove shows that, at the end of life, black or white does not matter. What remains from the poem is the yellow sun, still shining, and the yellow dancer, still giving order to chaos. Like the spinning paddlewheel of "The Event," the ballerina shirrs white and black to produce something new, with its own energy. Beulah's death parallels
her husband's. She can no longer see colors. Nevertheless, the walls
are "exploding with shabby tutus. . . " (52). This explosion
must be occurring within Beulah's mind, for she can no longer see
the wallpaper. Dove cannot contain this riot of color with single
descriptors, for it is all colors, fused together. It is many tutus,
all colorful or colorless, exploding within Beulah. Thomas' death
drained him of color. Beulah's death fills her with all colors. Dove
presents a paradox that solves itself. The absence of color is equal
to the possession of all colors, for both go beyond signifying just
one thing. Both incorporate everything and nothing. It does not matter
whether we call the experience positive or negative, a fulfillment
or a purgation. In the final analysis, the result is the same. Thomas
and Beulah represent two ways of arriving at the same reality. Both
have gone beyond color. Thomas has moved from the Negro leaning on
the rail of a riverboat to a man possessing the color of the sun to
a transparent man lying on the front seat of a car. Beulah has moved
from the juxtaposition of Pearl the black girl to a woman possessing
the yellow of a canary to a woman filled with all colors, lying in
her bed. Filled or drained, what is left of them is their progression
toward universality. We are left with this: the movement beyond what
both of these people were to what they become in death, icons of a
private history that speaks in universal tones. 1. Some of the most perceptive appreciations of Dove's poetry are: "Scars and Wings: Rita Dove's Grace Notes," by Bonnie Costello, in Callaloo 14.2 (1991): 434-38; "Crossing Boundaries," by Ekaterini Georgoudaki, in Callaloo 14.2 (1991): 419-33; "Four Salvers Salvaging: New Work by Voigt, Olds, Dove, and McHugh," by Peter Harris, in Virginia Quarterly Review 64.2 (1988): 262-76; "The Assembling Vision of Rita Dove," by Robert McDowell, in Callaloo 9.1 (1986): 61-70; "The Poems of Rita Dove," by Arnold Rampersad, in Callaloo 9.1 (1986): 52-60; and "I and Ideology: Demystifying the Self of Contemporary Poetry," by Gary Waller, in Denver Quarterly 18.3: 123-138. The Poems The Event Ever since they'd left
the Tennessee ridge The two Negroes leaning to Thomas' silver falsetto. churned mud and moonlight, to come out and dance. to a tree capped island. quick as a gasp. Thomas,
dry under, dissolved a stinking circle of rags, gently shirred. Taking in Wash Papa called her Pearl when
he came home She was Papa's girl, black
though she was. Once, every light hums, the kitchen
arctic and I'll cut you down Thomas at the Wheel This, then, the river he
had to swim. Then the glass doors flew
apart Should he honk? What a
joke- And now the street dark,
not a soul he laughed as he thought
Oh Company No one can help him anymore with his mandolin. There'll
be She's standing there telling
him: give it up. She tells him, listen:
we were good, The final poem in "Canary in Bloom" The Oriental Ballerina twirls in the tips of a
carnation as the windows-the walls
are still dark, pirouettes to the wheeze
of the old of the jewelbox lid. Two
pink slippers they do everything upside
down: where the bedrooms of the
poor teabags of cracked imitation
walnut veneer. roses, roses drifting with
a hiss suddenly opaque, walking. Where a straw
nods over The ballerina has been
drilling all night! so rapidly she is standing
still. breath floats like mist on its string and has lodged
beneath where there is none. The
ballerina dances the rest is shadow. its cheeks. There is no
China; the walls exploding with
shabby tutus. . . . |