birds in
the trees like madness
you are walking down a big city street
in a town that is not your own
you are beside a mental hospital
there is a park and in the park
all of the trees are bare of leaves
it is fall and almost winter
but the trees move
and you are astonished
to see they are thick with beating
the trees are alive with wings
thousands upon thousands of birds
are in the trees
and now swooping out of the sky
it is like it is raining birds
and it is only now
that you hear them
their voice one sound
loud
It
is good to see the release of Ottawa poet Michael Dennis' long-awaited Bad Engine: New and Selected Poems, “edited and introduced by
Stuart Ross” (Vancouver BC: Anvil Press, 2017). Given I was the editor of
Dennis’ only other volume of selected poems, This Day Full of Promise: Poems Selected and New (Fredericton NB:
Broken Jaw Press/cauldron books, 2003), I’d been intrigued to see what
directions Ross might head into for this new volume. Apart from the immediate
difference of Ross conducting line edits on the poems (something Dennis hadn’t allowed
before), Ross was also given access to a wide variety of unpublished and
uncollected work, opening up the possibilities enormously for a volume of work
by a poet far more productive than even his multiple book and chapbook titles
over the past four decades might suggest. As Ross writes in his introduction to
the collection: “And so Bad Engine
offers up revised versions of just about all the selected poems, as well as a
big complement of recent works. The couple thousand poems I read to concoct
this mixture drove home to me that Michael Dennis is the real thing when it
comes to poetry without artifice: poetry delivered directly from the various
organs of the gut.” Earlier on, he offers a perspective of Dennis’ overall
work:
What
is the greatest appeal in Michael’s work? I’d say it is his conviction, his
directness. And as brave and no-bullshit as he usually is, he’s the first to
admit to his own fuck-ups. Here is one of us: a human, but telling it like it
is – like it is for him.
Michael
belongs to a tradition of poets who do exactly these things, in their different
ways: Charles Bukowski, of course, and Lyn Lifshin; Milton Acorn, Tom Wayman
and Al Purdy; Eileen Myles and Sharon Olds. To me, a surrealist/absurdist, it’s
a precarious path to walk, because, well, it’s so raw. But that also means that to successfully pull off such a poem
is a pretty mean feat.
When
we embarked on this volume of selected and new poems, at various times I nudged
Michael to take a dip into surrealism, or experimentalism; I gave him assignments
to get him to get him to produce cut-ups. I could tell his heart wasn’t in it,
though, and why would it be? For him, perhaps there is enough surrealism,
absurdism, and disjunctiveness in real life. Besides, Michael has experimented: there are some visual
poems in his early books, but it clearly wasn’t a route he was interested in
following.
Ross
as an editor has been interesting over the past decade or so, editing volumes
for Mansfield Press and now Anvil, and has been responsible in many ways for a
revitalization for a number of poets’ careers that had otherwise fallen by the
wayside (for a variety of reasons), most notably David W. McFadden, who went on
to win the Griffin Poetry Prize (I would argue Jay MillAr has done much the
same revitalization for numerous other poets through BookThug, such as for Phil Hall and Victor Coleman). Opening with some two dozen pages of new material, Bad Engine provides less of a linear trajectory
to Dennis’ forty-plus years of poetry production than an exploration into a short
list of concerns that have occupied his writing throughout the years, from more
personal poems on and around various members of his family, commentary on his
current reading and poems that write out the immediacy of his day-to-day, from
doing dishes to sitting in pubs to reading the newspaper. One ould say that
Michael Dennis is a no-nonsense and straightforward poet of plainspeak and the
immediate, and there is something curious about how not a single piece in this
collection feels dated, irregardless of date of composition. His view may have
gained depth, wisdom and widened his scope over the intervening years, but Michael
Dennis is a poet who has cared about what is immediately in front of him, right
now, for a very long time now. Here’s hoping his perspective continues.
pork pie
hat in a minor chord
ever since I saw a photo
of Lester Young in a pork pie hat
I’ve wanted one of my own
Charles Mingus wrote
“Goodbye Pork Pie Hat”
with Joni Mitchell
Porky Pig wore a pork pie hat
and the irony of that
cracks me up
Dexter Gordon
Charlie Parker
all those cats
they wore them
now
I’ve got one
still no connection
between me
and the greats
but
hell if I don’t like
tipping my hat
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