Second Language is the fourth volume of work from the highly acclaimed poet Lisel Mueller. The second language of the title, English, supplanted Mueller’s native language when she came to the United States from Hitler’s Germany at age fifteen. But other second languages are at work here as well. The poems in this collection have to do with memory and metaphor, two forces that enable us to interpret our experience. Each is in a sense a second language, and in Mueller’s employ each gains expression in an imaginative and humanistic voice. In “English as a Second Language,” the various meanings of Second Language come together lucidly and effectively.The underpaid young teacher prints the letters t, r, e, e on the blackboard and imagines forests and gardens springing up in the tired heads of her students.But they see only four letters: a vertical beam weighed down by a crushing crossbar and followed by a hook, and after the hook, two squiggles, arcane identical twins which could be spying eyes or ready fists, could be handles, could be curled seedlings, could take root, could develop leaves. From “English as a Second Language” published in Second Language: Poems by Lisel Mueller. Copyright © 1986 by Lisel Mueller. All rights reserved. Other poems in Second Language consider the idiosyncrasies of the heart, the secrets and surprises of our inner lives, and the passing of time. Mueller also writes about aging and how it yields new interpretations of life. This strong new collection is a skillful weaving of layers of language by a mature and accomplished poet.
Lisel Mueller is the author of seven books of poetry, including Alive Together: New and Selected Poems, winner of the 1997 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. She has also received the National Book Award, the Lamont Poetry Prize, and the Carl Sandburg Prize. She lives in Lake County, Illinois.
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