Give the kid my notebook to quiet her.
Give it to her every year.
Give her every year
her head-top smelling
like an experiment in communal living.
In 2016 we will begin paying more
in benefits than we collect in taxes
leaking through to the secure side of
a compact between generations
prepared especially for Kate Schapira. (“The Beginnings of Generosity”)
In her fourth trade poetry collection, The Soft Place (Denver
CO: Horse Less Press, 2012), Providence, Rhode Island poet Kate Schapira composes
four poem/sections out of notes and fragments that accumulate into a work that
feels larger than the scope of the current trade work.
There is something about
her poetry that feels larger than the mere shape of itself, akin to works such
as bpNichol’s The Martyrology, Robert Kroetsch’s Completed Field Notes, or
more contemporary works, such as the poetry of Emily Carr, and yet, without
having seen any of her previous works, it becomes difficult to do anything but
throw out conjecture. Just what is it she is building?
Composed in four
poem-sections—“The Beginnings of Generosity,” “Suture Sutras,” “Open Storage”
and “Border Portal”—there is a meditational quality to the writing in The Soft Place, a thoughtful movement
that works equally slow and quick. As she writes in the first section:
Bottles
of breast milk even with their high
fat
content getting old waiting
colostomy
bags and seeps in the sides
of
transit
Cupping
the inarticulate flesh with inadequate hands
Schapira’s is a wide canvas, and this collection
feels merely a part of something ongoing, gives the appearance of writing as a
daily practice, akin to bpNichol’s “poem as long as a life.” Schapira stitches,
in the finest sense, a quilt composed of fragments, a structure most obvious in
the third section. The travel-section, “Open Storage,” unlike the other
sections, is made up of individually-titled poems (as opposed to a poem/section
of accumulated fragments), each of which repeat and wrap around each other in a
compelling cadence of repetition. Poems in this section include “Train Notes
(Expanded),” “Ocean, Air and Sickness: Day 1,” “Safety Fact 1,” “Ocean, Air and
Sickness: Day 2,” “Safety Fact 2,” and multiple “Heirloom Notes (Expanded),”
among others.
Train Notes
(Expanded)
“look, listen and live” (Fall asleep
with hands guarding hills and old woods
inside your sweater, softer
wood eating into harder sand)
(For lovers’ protection labels attach
themselves to precautions) “Have occupants
move away from windows and cover eyes”
“Everything your weakened, damaged or failing
heart desires” (Mouth chasing
air in your dream, body bulwark wrapping
—a soft world means a thin barrier)
“We turn heart failure into heart success”
(We move as fast as the words move)
Schapira manages to connect her work back to
itself without falling into mockery, equally managing to extend the scope of
the individual poems, and the collection as a whole, most of which does feel as
though sketched out during travel, with shades of the epistolary. When
comparing this collection to another of the press’ titles, Richard Froude’s Fabric
(Horse Less Press, 2011) [see my review of such here], it gives the impression that the editors of Horse
Less Press might prefer quality poetry manuscripts constructed out of long,
thoughtful, meditative fragments. How do such works get constructed? I am
interested in pursuing her other works, to attempt to figure out.
Heirloom
Notes (Concluded)
“I want us to be like that 95-year-old
oven,” you say. Big cement
lions on both sides of an overpass
bridge. Flat park and muddy
river below; fog and hillside, tangle
and ivy, dark twilight, cold
damp air. I wrote this down carefully. I
brought it to you.
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