Dammit.
American poet Hillary Anne Gravendyk Burrill, otherwise known as Hillary Gravendyk, died on Sunday after an extended illness. For those who might not
known of her or her work, her poetry collection, Harm (Omnidawn, 2012) [see my review of such here], wrote around
the body, and more specifically, the facts surrounding her double lung
transplant in 2009. Through the publication of Harm, we began a small correspondence, and attempted to keep up
with each other through emails and facebook, and I could see some of what she
was dealing with, distracting her away from the work she so obviously fought to
return to. We had discussed the possibilities of her engaging the ‘12 or 20
questions’ interview questions, but we never quite managed such. She generously
provided a blurb for the back cover of one of my trade collections, and
promised that she would get me some poems, once she was writing again. I enjoyed her work tremendously, and, despite not knowing her terribly well, enjoyed her
remarkable energy and generosity, especially through her physical difficulties. I am wishing we'd been able to meet. Her last email, from early April, included:
How are you? I've been enjoying the pictures of your sweet
Rose on Facebook. What a charmer. My health is always a crisis, but in the last
few months I've had a welcome sense of stability. Things aren't getting better, but they aren't
crashing like they were in the fall.
Just adjusting to the new normal, enjoying the pleasant SoCal weather,
and taking pleasure in many things: LACMA, many good books, learning to knit,
cooking, and finally getting back to the business of writing poems and essays.
If you are interested,
I've also got two collaborative poetry projects going now: a book-length one with the poet Cynthia Arrieu-King, a shorter one with the poet Maureen Alsop
(whose work I think you'd really like, do you know it?). I wonder if you might have a good idea of
publishers that would welcome (consider, even!) collaborative book projects?
This
email includes everything I enjoyed about her missives: the delight she took
from others, as well as the possibilities of her writing projects, but also includes both an
acknowledgement and subtle downplay of her own health crises. I knew she’d been
struggling with her health for some time (and knew it had been quite bad a few
months back), but didn’t realize it was as bad as it was. Since the news of her
passing, others have begun posting small notes on Hillary and her work, such as
this piece on The Eat and Run Mom, a video of her reading posted on Ron Silliman’s blog, a piece posted on the Pomona College website, two poems reprinted at The Mark on the Wall, and a piece by Brenda Hillman forthcoming at Omnidawn. My own little poem "in memoriam" appeared earlier in the week at Moss Trill. With
the notice Hillary’s husband Benjamin Burrill wrote on her Facebook page on
Sunday afternoon, he included this poem:
Exuberance
To know me as golden is
to know me all wrong. Every time I breathe in it smells rusty, like blood, and when I cough
there is blood in the air.
If I were in charge of
these special effects, I’d make it thicker; it’s so hard to take it seriously. Bright little hearts and stars and carnations on a white cloth.
Let’s go out with a
thicker line, a cerulean skylight, rain that gets dumped out of a trough to
thwack the pane of glass, a smear of red like tempera paint across the cheek or
the hand, streaming from the mouth.
Let’s have a disaster,
a lake made of salt, a blackout. Everything riots and unspools, the whole room on one side
and all the sound winking out.
You stay here. Let me
run into that starring role, pinker and more flooded with blood: remember when it meant
exuberance, remember awe? Let’s be that breathless.
In
that same email I received in April, she sent along four poems for
consideration for the “Tuesday poem” series I curate over at the dusie blog,
all of which I accepted, to post on July 22, 2014. I offer one of them, here:
Hillary
Hillary
You creep through the
air, a voice calling my name
in this dimmer winter
where keels freeze to swells
I was lost in the
delicacy of your warning, at sea.
Held myself against the
roll of your tongue,
the door open like a
mouth and the air falling
through more air, a
hole in the light—
You carry each pinprick
of rain and lay
me in fragments on the
counterpane,
you circle the room, a
quieting crow.
The window slices
absence into segments
the door slaps the side
of the house
and I’m ankle deep in
clouds.
Thank you for this Rob. I loved Hillary very much and am presently in shock. I appreciate your memorial here.
ReplyDeleteHer poetry here is a gift. Thank you, Rob.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful poems by a beautiful poet. The opening line of Exuberance is very similar to a line in The Funeral by Band of Horses. I wonder if that was the inspiration. Rest in peace, dear Hillary.
ReplyDeleteThank you Rob. I meant to say that when I first read your comments but was too overcome. Thank you. Katherine
ReplyDelete