TEA CEREMONY
wipers sluice
pollen
from the
windshield—
tea ceremony
the porch
lights up
bats return
to the barn
moon my
companion
on the road
heading home
in the house
I left last night
people are
brushing their teeth
I’m always
intrigued by the notion of the poetic collaboration. When it’s done well, it
manages to highlight a way of writing not individually possible by any of the
writers involved. This new small collection, Whisk (St. John’s NF: Pedlar Press, 2013) is composed by “Yoko’s Dogs,” a writing group founded in 2006 by the Canadian poets Jan Conn, Mary di Michele, Susan Gillis and Jane Munro, each of whom have been producing their
own individual works for some time. Given that the four of them might share the
same writing space and space on the page, the narrative disconnect is one that
anyone might expect, and their own individual more narrative works blend
together into a form that might be seen as akin to the North American ghazal,
or even the English forms of the haiku. In these poems, the four-become-one
seem to favour highlighting narrative smallness, extending the small moments of
the English-language haiku, and the tangentical leaps of the ghazal. Through
these moments, the finest of the poems shine through, but when the lines
attempt to connect too much on the narrative level is when the pieces break
apart.
SMALL SONG
a cricket
stops singing –
that really
is Prince Andrei
home and
alive
wren at the
window
I move, it’s
gone
the girl
practices trumpet –
coyotes
in the canola
rain is my
shower
I share a bed
with field mice
Why fight to
artificially connect what might be entirely impossible? It’s as though the
collaborative fifth that is emerging from the mix is one that distrusts the
narrative impulse, and yet, the group hasn’t yet learned to trust that voice,
and their own intuition, instead fighting against the very thing they are
attempting to create. The strength of the poems in this collection come through
the disconnection itself, four voices merging into one, and through this, the
best of the poems come. The tension between their own individual voices and
that of the collaborative fifth is compelling, but that tension doesn’t necessarily
make the best poems. Instead, it highlights the fact that this is a
collaboration-in-progress, yet something that reads as far more lively than
similar works by Pain-Not-Bread. The book reads as an interesting experiment,
and one they should certainly further, but perhaps an idea that hasn’t quite solidified.
NOT AVERSE TO FLOWERING
the rambling
rose
is not averse
to flowering
among yellow
leaves
Pearl gets
her hair done once a week
at the salon
downstairs
watch dog or
barred owl
whuuu hu whoos
in the woods
out back
misses the
rabbit on the second try
that bobcat
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