Still
Life With Canadiana
The wind is going a
hundred
miles an hour, mewling
in the chimney like a
vodkathin drunk.
Pale broadloom, an
automated
snowman. Three girls
grow in choir
robes on the mantel:
from left to right
their hair and faces
lengthen.
The microwave is
humming,
and the lights on the
tree.
Pitch-perfect, two
sisters on
matching florals grow
limber
with Kahlua. Above the
wind,
and below it, they
scale the melody’s
frame, and descend.
Another sister pads in,
towelling
dry her long, blonde
hair, braiding
in a harmony.
In the hall, their
mother and aunt
pause a discussion on
cats.
On the sofa, their
great-aunt closes
her eyes.
When the song is done,
their father says
Dinner, and the middle sister disappears
for a cigarette.
The frozen yard outside
is so quiet,
she thinks it must have
snowed
all over the world.
There
is something quite remarkable in the poetry of Toronto poet Eva Haralambidis-Doherty,
otherwise known as Eva H.D., through her first poetry collection Rotten Perfect Mouth (Toronto ON:
Mansfield Press, 2015). Remarkable, and rare, in the fact that she hadn’t published
a single word before the appearance of this collection (something she shares
with Ottawa poet Jennifer Baker, who didn’t publish a word before the appearance of her recent first chapbook, as well as Calgary poet Nikki Sheppy).
In her opening salvo, Rotten Perfect
Mouth is a strong and compelling collection, and one from a poet I very
much hope we hear more from. Her powerful and playful poems exist as a series
of lyric narratives constructed out of personal observations, writing out
stories of meteors and lies, various locations in and beyond Toronto, oceans,
daydreams and conflicts, among other subjects both abstract and immediately
concrete. There is a curious surrealism that permeates Eva H.D.’s
collection, one that includes occasional, incredible quirks and connections that
leap off the page. During her recent reading as part of the Ottawa Mansfield
Press launch I could hear elements of the late American writer Richard Brautigan’s poetry, and his ability to blend opposing thoughts into unexpected
images. There is something lovely and lyric and unusual in her poetry worth
paying attention to, a kind of staccato pulse that races through her lines as
she writes “The snow is pounding down / like a herd of ballerinas, / and fills
up the window / between MYSTERY and / ROMANCE / with its white weight.” (“Why
Basements Are Safe”), “The sky never touches the ground but races it, forever
and ever. / Amen.” (“Racing It”), or the opening of the poem “Liberty Bell,”
that reads:
Your fern hands, those
saturated fronts
pealing down my ribcage,
you Liberty Bell.
Furling and unfurling,
green as tides,
and they are cream,
snapping like sails,
tapered tethered doves.
The wingbeats a
delicate violence.
Each one a fluttering,
fickle heart,
daubing the air.
My little hypotenuse.
My champagne
cork. My crocus. My
snowdrop. My
holy holy shit.
My friendless renard,
all tipsy
with va et vient. You
jibtop.
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