McGregor Street
Nothing makes nothing happen. That was true
along McGregor Street in Montreal and in
a certain woman’s weary heart this side of
the Selkirk mountain range. You must have seen
nothing or perhaps the tree full of it in our
back yard. When I first saw a single cherry
tree
in a back yard I did not understand it;
cherry trees grew very high in my childhood, in
groves, cool shadows between them, eyelids
of beautiful women should be so cool. If you
have a single cherry tree in your back yard,
change it
to a pear tree in your stories. (George
Bowering)
I
find this new double collection by Vancouver poets George Bowering and George Stanley fascinating, a dos-à -dos flip book made up of Bowering’s “Some End” and Stanley’s “West Broadway”(Vancouver BC: New Star Books, 2018). With each
section running roughly forty pages in length, both Bowering and Stanley write
in and around their Vancouver geographies and concerns, from aging—Stanley’s “Blood
is toxic to the retina” from the poem “5,” or Bowering’s “Does it bring any
solace or calm to you / to know the sun is mortal, too?” from “Bright”—to the ins and outs of reading, friends and their
immediate locales. Around 2005 or so, I heard the two illustrious senior
Canadian poets read together at a festival in Vancouver alongside George
Elliott Clarke, and the three Georges were fascinating to watch in sequence,
given their individual penchants for deep rhythms, and their reading habits of
each conducting their readings with one hand.
The
two sections do hold to each other in conversation, continuing their individual
trajectories from decades of work that also discover the places in which they
meet, and overlap, from Stanley’s “Letter to George Bowering” that responds to
Bowering’s “Letter to George Stanley,” or Bowering’s “The Country North of
Summer,” a poem that plays off a combination of George Stanley’s North of California St. (New Star Books,
2014) [see my review of such here] and Gentle
Northern Summer (New Star, 1995). Curiously, the poem itself doesn’t engage
with Stanley directly, but is instead a meditation to and for the late Al Purdy: “The grave wherein my pen pal is laid lies / at the bottom of a country
road saying his name. / It’s a dandy place to lean against the stone book / and
read a bunch of poems, except in winter.” Bowering, through dozens upon dozens
of works of poetry, fiction and criticism, has been a frequent responder to and
commentator upon the works of others, from contemporaries to mentors to heroes
and anyone else whose work might cross his path and connect, and his section
includes numerous threads and structures familiar to anyone who has spent time
with any of his prior work. Much can be said also of George Stanley’s “West
Broadway,” a section that opens with an extended sequence, “West Broadway,”
stretched across a specific thread of Vancouver geography:
This river runs both ways.
West it flows (up its tributary Tenth Avenue)
to the ‘uni’ (as I’ve heard one Ontarienne call
it).
East it goes to the ‘Anti-city’ (Scott’s word)
& a former city planner says
& a former city planner says
downtown business interests placed obstacles in
the way
of development along central Broadway, seeing
it
as a potential rival. From the late ‘50s, it
becomes
Vancouver’s doctor-and-dentist-land.
Fairmont Medical Building 91959). Look at the windows.
Fourteen storeys of narrow, dark offices.
Panoramic vista – 19th floor of the
‘electric razor building’:
North Score mountains & the city glittery
like a magic island
from the hygienist’s chair, until she tips me
back.
Thoughts arrive by bus, car, cab,
on ped X-ings cross Broadway,
afoot, w/cane, walker, in wheelchair;
when traffic flows again, cross Willow,
to clinic, pharmacy, lab.
As
far as Stanley’s responses to other poets, his suggest influences that go far
deeper through his own history as a writer, composing a poem after a specific
piece by Baudelaire, and multiple poems after Anna Akhmatova, such as his “Our
Age (an imitation),” that begins:
Why is this age worse than all those preceding?
Because deranged by greed and desirous of
pleasure,
we borrowed against the cancer that was eating
us,
the wound we could not close.
Some End/West Broadway is an intriguing
conversation between these two senior Vancouver poets who have been friends for
decades, and poets for far longer, writing towards each other in such a way as
to highlight their shared sensibilities, as well as their differences.
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