As
If I Were Anything Before
Not all rocks
are alive. Or
so I’ve read.
Someone I love
is struggling, her thoughts
a coral net.
The pills fail.
Her chakras shatter.
I want to show her
the Canadian Shield.
I’m in Sudbury.
It’s snowing.
The pine trees looked
lovely as I drove
the treacherous roads.
I’m ill-equipped
for this. I sit
by a fake fireplace
that frames a real
flame.
I’ve been crossed
by two crows today.
The
long-awaited second poetry collection by Toronto poet and editor Damian Rogers
is Dear Leader (Toronto ON: Coach
House Books, 2015), a collection of poems rife with energy and beauty,
observation and tension, writing as deeply contemporary as might be possible in
poetry. Dear Leader, which appears
six years after her Paper Radio
(Toronto ON: ECW Press, 2009), is an exploration of hope, rage, memory, loss
and salvage struggling through a series of optimisms, in poems that attempt to
capture the minutae of everyday living, whether writing on and around explaining
ecology to a toddler, classic albums, villanelles and Mrs. Frank Lloyd Wright, or
notes sketching out a series of thoughts and ideas both casual and deep. There is
such a curious way that Rogers composes a poem around a thought, stretching and
searching across a great distance over a few short lines. “The Book of Going
Forth In Glitter” begins: “See the daughters of the screenshot / arrange their
arms like / the ladies in major paintings // for an online salon. See them
inventory / their makeup bags in popular verse. / What’s worse? My peeling skin
// or how my mind shrivels in its cap?” Or “The
Black Album On Acid,” that writes: “I’m at the centre of the never- /
ending night. // You pull me out.”
Certain
poems in the collection exist as short monologues or scene studies, such as the
poem “There’s No Such Thing As Blue Water,” that opens: “I’ve been thinking
that montage is a mental technique / for accepting unity as a convulsive
illusion. I feel sick. / I hate it when my stories have holes, though I suspect
/ there’s where the truth leaks out. So go back to bed.” Another piece, “Mrs.
Frank Lloyd Wright’s Black Lambswool Coat,” opens: “And we were talking about
the house / parties where all the guests / try to describe / the milky void [.]”
I’m curious as to Rogers’ explorations in prose and the sentence, and wonder if
she might be leaning her way towards postcard fiction, easing slowly from one
genre into the possibility of another.
Dear
Leader
Fuck the
fourteen-year-old who flirted with my boyfriend. If I’ve turned ugly on the
inside, it’s all her fault. Where were you when my love split the planet in
two? I knew who would undo me. Did you grab her throat and drag her downstairs?
I’ve been betrayed by the boys who sprayed my name under the overpass, the ones
who walked me home in a pack, called me their tender pet. This isn’t over yet.
I eat you I eat you I eat
you.
There
is a complexity to her poems, and an anxiety that quickly emerges as well, as
from someone paying deep attention to the world, but not entirely pleased with what
is going on, and occasionally uncertain on the effects humanity has on itself
and the surrounding planet, as the end of the poem “Storm”: “We live in / the
arteries / of a large / ugly animal / and I saw / it move.” One of the finest
poems in the collection has to be her “Poem for Robin Blaser,” composed with such
a graceful ease and space of breath, and dedicated to the late, great Vancouver poet. “O,” she opens the piece, “I know your thoughts are with the gods, / so
young and loose.” The final couplet of the short piece, both lovely and
striking, manages to somehow exist as a distillation of the book as a whole:
You blew smoke at me and smiled.
Nothing is so easy.
No comments:
Post a Comment