The rebellion is now a thing
of the past, it is now a page
When a few
generations shall come and
go our sad
story of the Frog Lake
Massacre may
be totally forgotten and
the actors
therein consigned to
oblivion,
but, these few papers, should
they by any
chance survive the hand of
time will
tell to the children of the
future Canada
what those of your day
experienced
and suffered and when
those who are
yet to be learn the extent
of the
troubles undergone and the
sacrifices
made by those of the present
to set them
examples worthy of
imitation and
models fit for their
practice to
build up for them a great
and solid
nation they may perhaps
reflect with
pride upon the history of
their country
its struggles dangers
tempests and
calms in those days I
trust and
pray that Canada may be the
realization
of that glowing picture of a
grand nation
drawn by a Canadian poet
Towards the
end of Calgary poet and small press publisher Paul Zits’ first trade poetry
collection, Massacre Street (Edmonton
AB: University of Alberta Press, 2013), he includes the poem “The rebellion is
now a thing / of the past, it is now a page,” centring the collection precisely
there, at the beginning. Zits composes his Massacre Street to recreate “a poetic view of the Frog Lake Massacre of April 2,
1885,” structured from the influence of various perspectives on the Canadian historical
prairie poem. Zits is working very clearly in a tradition that includes work by
Robert Kroetsch, Monty Reid, Aritha Van Herk, Jon Paul Fiorentino and Dennis
Cooley, each of whom managed to reenergize both history and the form of “documentary
poetics.” An unfortunate result of “documentary poetics,” in Canadian writing
at least, is that too many poets have composed poetry collections that merely
replicate information on historical and/or literary figures and/or events
without adding much of anything, whether to the documentary information or
poetic structure. I won’t mention names or titles, but the offenders are many. Zits,
on the other hand, seemingly takes as his models the poetics of both Kroetsch
and Cooley, falling somewhere between the lyric questioning, tall tales and the perpetual return to the beginning of Robert Kroetsch, and the collage-quilt of
storytelling of Dennis Cooley, most notably in his own historical prairie poem,
Bloody Jack (Winnipeg MB: Turnstone
Press, 1984). The book is constantly moving, searching, interrupting and
questioning everything that is being presented, resulting in an unsettled book
on an unfinished question, and one that attempts not to assign blame, but
attempt to discover the correct questions.
without giving expression to sentiments of sorrow
I will strive to push on
to the end of my undertaking
without tiring my readers
with vain expressions
____
It was in a
circle
and a space
in the centre being kept for dancing
and the
rabbit in the pot boiling, it was all there, head, eyes, feet
and
everything together
and Little
Poplar was arrayed in some of Miss McLean’s ribbons, ties
and shawls
and another
with my hat tumbling over the bank
and another
with Mrs.. Delaney’s
and the
squaws with our dresses
and before
the sun went down they wrapped blankets around her
as if, coming
down, she would eat the whole camp up
____
a sea of
green interspersed with beautiful flowers and plants
as in the
echo after every bomb, charm lying in its wake
it glided
along the large rivers and lakes and desired rest
carrying
white flags, fishing and waving white flags
or perhaps
the pages of a blood and thunder novel
I breathed in
the echo of every bomb, a prairie charm delusion
except perhaps
when viewed from the deck of a steamer
____
Massacre Street is a large, complex and
critical document on a messy and complicated period of Canadian history, a
history that, in many ways, Canada is still working to comprehend, and come to
terms with. The poems, too, are attempting to find out what happened. Through the
poems of Massacre Street, Zits adds a
polyphonic and critical gaze, refusing a single point of view but exploring
many, and can be read as a poetic sibling to Myrna Kostash’s Frog Lake Reader (Edmonton AB: NeWest
Press, 2009), or cousin to Margaret Sweatman’s novel, When Alice Lay Down with Peter (Knopf, 2002). Through exhaustive
research and a large curiosity, Zits manages to bring the material a new kind
of life. Had only history been written so well before.
I
fear I should have lost my small army in this
very
big Country
The most
applauded warrior wore
a policeman’s
old tunic
on the back
of which was chalked
a
representation of himself
firing into a
teepee of sleeping enemies
The horses
also were depicted
in convenient
proximity
for removal
after this
glorious feat
of arms
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