According to and fittingly – a break
and our pockets fill with flowers to conceal
the smell of dying.
Thus
concludes the final succumbing to bloody pomander and posy.
The only authentic
reference being a ring – a ring of roses
moreover
and other than this
covenant
for
happiness.
Eventually.
We
would have – O, we would have. (“A General Tale”)
Over
the course of three trade poetry collections, Ottawa poet (formerly of
Saskatchewan) Sandra Ridley has evolved her poems to encompass a particularly
wide canvas. In her third collection, The Counting House (Toronto ON: BookThug, 2013), following her previous two – Fallout (Regina SK: Hagios Press, 2009) [see my review of such here] and Post-Apothecary
(Toronto ON: Pedlar Press, 2011) [see my review of such here] – Ridley manages
pinpoint minutae of a complex thought, extended and stretched apart to reveal
and revel in an incredibly dense gymnastic language on par with contemporary
Canadian poets Margaret Christakos, Sylvia Legris and Christine McNair. Through
this new collection, Sandra Ridley composes silence, a considered hush, and a
tension so taut that it hums.
Falling – not always a dropping to the ground
construed
as rhyme not death
not a literal fall or heartbreak
instead (but)
any other form of respective bending. (“A
General Tale”)
Structured
in four poem-sections – “A General Tale,” “Lax Tabulation,” “Testamonium” and “Luxuria”
– the second section “was written as an ekphrastic response to michèle provost’s
art installation, ABSTrACTS / RéSuMÉS: An Exercise in Poetry, at the Ottawa Art Gallery. Others who responded to her
work were jwcurry, John Lavery, Pearl Pirie, Carmel Purkis, and Grant Wilkins. Our
material was presented at Ottawa’s artist-run-centre, Saw Gallery, in early
2010, in cooperation with the AB Series.” The poems in this collection explore
physical space, constraint, and the space of trauma, nimbly composed within a coiled
and considered breath. Ridley is very much a poet working in longer forms, with
the book as her unit of composition, and in an interview I recently conducted
with her (forthcoming in filling Station magazine), she described some of the book’s construction:
There isn’t much
of a landscape in The Counting House
and not a strict narrative either. The four serial poems are centred on the
lack of information about courtly affection gone awry and about the tallying of
the gaps that kind of absence makes. The first section was catalyzed by my
reading of interpretations of traditional English rhymes, as found in the Roud Folk Song Index—petty epics of kings, queens and maidens, and
the pageantry and pedantry of their unnoble state of affairs.
The remaining
three sections are connected in tone. One was written via ekphrasis, with me
looking through a bifocal lens of Michel Foucault’s Discipline and Punish and Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex. The second section is a long poem composed in
response to michèle
provost’s art installation, ABSTrACTS/RéSuMÉS: An Exercise in Poetry, with that lens
in front of me.
If there is any
thematic continuity following from my first two books, it would come from my
obsession with harm—as manifest through seclusion
and (re)assertion.
There’s a
substantial amount of accusation and denial in the house’s tallying, and as the
text moves through time, the tabulation takes different forms. The non-story
becomes clearer and more like a reckoning. I was curious about what an accountant’s notebook might look like
in poetic form.
Composing
and colluding the gradients of pleasure and pain wrapped up in harm, Ridley
explores courtly love: “The art of rectifying. Without interruption by the
slightest punishment. Or a whole sequence. / Coercions. Verdicts. Confusions.”
(“Testamonium”). Exploring facts, exclusions, silences and expectations, the book
asks, what does your love do to you, what does it make you become?
When your darling considers it. It she was
concerned with it then. Aware of the sundries. Details. Despair become a whole
history.
She had a lack of willingness. Insufferable. Her
crudest form.
With the same persistence. She cedes to
tendency. Falls with a rigorous ferocity.
Perpetually.
Bitten hands.
Bitten
lip. (“Testamonium”)
The Counting House also has one of the
finest covers I’ve seen on a poetry book in some time, replicating artwork by
Gatineau artist michèle provost. Stitched into three dimensions, provost’s
artwork provide a fantastic physicality to the metaphoric house, so deftly
constructed through the scope of the poems.
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