LET'S BORROW FROM physics and call the idea that everything is part of a complex interrelated whole that operates according to a single, universal set of principles the idea of a "unified field." One of Graham's best poems (the poem that lent its title to her volume of selected poems) is called "The Dream of the Unified Field," which suggests both that the idea fascinates her that the idea may just be a hubristic human fantasy, a Babel-like attempt to rival God.
But if we say God alone is the principle of the "unified field," that God alone comprehends the complex interrelated whole that operates according to a single, universal set of principles, then we are up against the Problem of Evil (i.e, the question of why evil exists is God is both omnipotent and benevolent).
The Dream of the Unified Field" is in part about exactly this, I suspect.
The idea of a center fits in here. In the third part of "Dream," Graham is walking through a storm and hears "inside the swarm, the single cry // of the crow. One syllable--one--inside the screeching and the / skittering,/ inside the constant repatterning of a thing not nervous yet / not ever / still--but not uncertain--without obedience / yet not without law--one syllable [...]." Is the cry of the crow the secret unifying principle? Can Graham in some way identify with it? In the sixth part, still in the storm, "I close my eyes and, /standing in it, try to make it mine." It's as though she is trying to home in on the frequency that unifies the field.
Centers also figure in Overlord, but the idea seems to be to stop thinking about centers. This is the first of the two poems titled "Disenchantment" (which seems to be about Gerhard Richter):
there was to be a meeting, as one of lovers, but then something was
arrested--
just there where the center was beginning to form--
no, there should not be a center--listen how it echoes--
you can blot it nicely with some abstraction--
"Europe (Omaha Beach 2003)" seems to be trying to talk itself into abandoning the idea that things have centers, that physics plays by our rules:
No basic building blocks "of
matter." No constituent particles from which everything
is made. No made. No human eye. The rules?
Everything speeding towards "the observer." Who is
that? The other who is me perceives
the tiny stream of particles, hazy,
the superimposition of states. Entanglement. Immediacy.
I am guessing "superimposition" is related "superposition," which, like "entanglement." is one of those deeply counterintuitive findings that quantum physics likes to toss in our laps.
"Physician" is about a patient with an illness that, among other things, may be about the conundrums of physics:
Everywhere crammed full of the crushed
and confused and still-milling numberless angels.
Everywhere in the solids of our world them rushing towards each other.
As there is nowhere else for them to rush towards.
Even in my room, in my walls, right there, deep inside them,
something filled with greatest passion, thickening folds of it, is
personally embracing
a void.
We're crushed in a crowd yet still moving at the speed of light. No wonder we're ill.
And then there is Iphigenia.
