Rachel
insisted Keira Jo be swaddled, not clothed.
She’s not a doll, she said. And besides
there are
rituals reserved for mothers. The gentle
first tug of
naked arms through cotton, white socks
on new feet.
She didn’t want her daughter dressed
the first
time by a mortician, lovingly or by rote. It
was,
Rachel said, the most terrifying moment of my life—
preparing to
hold her dead girl, a pixie,
she said, perfect. When I stooped over the box
Keira Jo was
wearing a yellow toque, swaddled
in white, an
almost-child. Small red face, perfect
lips.
Plutarch, in Moralia, wrote not to be born is best
of all, and death better than life, but the
wisdom
of Silenus is
stilled by one small mouth at the breast,
a tiny heart—that
sparrow, Rachel’s thumb
clutched by a
small pink hand, any flutter
however
small. (“A bowl of strawberries in an empty room”)
I don’t
normally favour lyric poetry so overtly narrative, but there is something about
the lyric of
Jessica Hiemstra’s second trade poetry collection, Self-Portrait Without a Bicycle (Emeryville ON: Biblioasis, 2012), that immediately takes
hold. Given that she is also a working visual artist (her sketches adorn both
cover and inside the collection), there is something of the rough sketch to
some of these poems, deceptively rough but finely hewn, shockingly precise in
quick, quiet lines. The collection is made up of a series of meditative poems that focus on smallness, from matters of the domestic to language to matters-of-fact,
such as the poem “Well, the cat’s dead,” that opens with “I wasn’t fond of her
but one dandelion in a jar / is pretty.”
Every so
often, there might be a line that rankles, such as “I felt my skin grow taut.”
in the otherwise strong poem “I told my first stranger I was pregnant,” but
these near-cliché lines appear to be the exception, and not the rule. With
references to the art of Alex Colville, Yann Martel, grandparents and children,
these are poems grounded in the immediate world, open and completely bare,
following the essential lines of quiet. Composed with such clarity and soft
humour, what might a writer such as Jessica Hiemstra do, perhaps, with fiction?
I would worry it might read too straight, as so much other contemporary
fiction, but I would read a fiction that writes as these poems do, slipping in
and around a directness more direct than confession.
Mom rescued Alex Colville from the library
and we took
him home, tattered and torn. A librarian
had taken
scissors to him, removed the nakedness,
left the
guns. Mom gathered up the loose pages,
carefully
taped the women back in. Violence,
she said
against love. I didn’t know what she meant.
Truth
lies in
juxtaposition. Painting occurs, Alex
says,
when I think of two disparate elements. That night
I opened Tragic Landscape on my lap and got lost
in the folds
of cow beyond the soldier, still grazing,
as though
death had taken nothing. I knew the man
was dead, but
I searched the painting for a sign he was
sleeping.
Later that year I was censored too, my Mrs. Milling,
who took my
drawing of Adam and Eve and hid it
in her desk.
She said I had made them too naked. Nakedness
makes us
afraid. Imagine my mother hadn’t
stitched up
the book, imagine just Pacific and Bodies
in a Grave, Belsen. I spent the
evening thinking
about guns,
women in bathtubs, artists at war. What makes
something
indecent is not skin but scissors.
This morning
I tried to buy The Art of Alex Colville,
but it was
too expensive. Tomorrow I’ll try eBay,
perhaps
someone doesn’t know what it’s worth.
No comments:
Post a Comment