SEA CHANGE DOES not, for reasons I gave in the previous post, feel like a sea change to me. It must have felt like one to Graham, I am guessing, or she would not have chosen the title she did. And when Graham switched publishers to Copper Canyon, she/they put together her previous four books as a single volume, [To] the Last [Be] Human, starting with Sea Change, which suggests she sees Sea Change inaugurating a distinct phase of her work.
I have to admit Sea Change feels unified in ways no other Graham collection does. That every poem employs (what I am going to call) Graham-form (a long line followed by one or several shorter deeply indented "outrider" lines) does a lot to create this unity, but it is not only that. Thematic currents run through the book, too, sometimes so strongly felt that the whole book feels like a single poem. Most of her other books have thematic currents as well--I'd say Materialism, The Errancy, and Swarm definitely do--but something feels different this time.
I wish I could name the thematic current. I can't. But it may have to do with some sense of completeness, fullness, pleroma...not permanent or enduring of course, all too brief in fact, like whatever it was Pascal was writing about in his "Memorial."
Let's try some passages. This is from "Later in Life":
[...] it is your right to be so entertained, & if you are starting to
feel it is hunger this
gorgeousness,, feel the heat fluctuate & say
my
name is day, of day, in day, I want nothing to
come back, not ever, & these words are mine, there is no angel to
wrestle, there is no inter-
mediary, there is something I must
tell you, you do not need existence, these words, praise be, they can for now be
said. That is summer. Hear them.
I feel no certainty about the pronouns here. "You" may be Graham, "I" may be Being...but a being that does not require existence...which means Being need not be...which makes no sense. You see my difficulty. But the relentless desire present so often in Graham, the aching excavating need to get to the bottom of things, seems satisfied here, some completion or sufficiency has been achieved.
Whatever it is, it has something to do with summer, so it seems right that another poem, "Summer Solstice," speaks to the same pleroma:
you could call it matrimony it is not an illusion it can be calculated to the last position,
consider no further think no longer all
art of
persuasion ends here, the head has been put back on the body, it stands before us
entire--it has been proven--all the pieces have
been found--the broken thing for an instant entire--oh strange
addition and sum, here is no other further step
to be taken, we have arrived, all the rest now a falling
back, but not yet not now now is all now and
here--the end of the day will not end--will stay with us
this fraction longer--
the hands of it all extending--
"Summer Solstice" makes me think Graham should have had a chapter in Charles Taylor's last book. Dualities like mind and body, subject and object, divine and human seem transcended, not once and for all but only for an interval ("all the rest now a falling / back"), but even so a marriage has occurred ("you could call it matrimony"), oppositions have reconciled.
It might even be a marriage, or at least an I-Thou relationship, between humans and the rest of the Earth, a way of imagining ourselves that could arrest our despoliation of our home. This is from "Just Before":
[...] some felt it was freedom, or a split-second of unearthliness--but no, it was far from un-
earthly, it was full of
earth, at first casually full, for some millennia, then
desperately full--of earth--of copper mines and thick under-leaf-vein sucking in of
light, and isinglass, and dusty heat--wood-rings
bloating their tree-cells with more
life--and grass and weed and tree intermingling in the
undersoil--& the
earth's whole body round
filled with
uninterrupted continents of
burrowing--& earthwide miles of
tunnelling by the
mole, bark beetle, snail, spider, worm--& ants making their cross-
nationstate cloths of
soil, & planetwide the
chewing of insect upon leaf--fish-mouth on krill,
the spinning of
coral, sponge, cocoon--this is what entered the pool of stopped thought [...].
This sense of cosmic connection is not Graham's usual beat, and in PLACE things got dark again, but it rings true here. And maybe the best examples of what I am trying to talk about here are the collection's last two poems, "Undated Lullaby" and "No Long Way Round."

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