NO 59981 05825; 56.24324°
N, 2.64731° W
Landward, the cave mouth conspicuously dark.
Halfway between Anstruther and Crail,
singular in the vicinity. Prominent
calcareous sandstone outcrop on a raised beach
level, short lengths of passage
and as spectacularly weathered as the
coexistence
of good and evil, the earth pigments.
Anchor in five metres, taking care to avoid
the numerous creel markers. At half-tide
a dinghy may be hauled out where the reef
buffers
flat rocks, though they are sharp
and landing delicate, if land you must.
Wind may complicate return to the boat. Any visit
is a lesson in how quickly conditions change.
What
is immediately fascinating about Toronto poet and editor Karen Solie latest
full-length collection, The Caiplie Caves
(Toronto ON: Anansi, 2019), is how it is built: more than a collection
thematically or structurally shaped, but a singular, book-length work constructed
around a core idea. As the press release offers:
In the seventh century, on the coast of Fife,
Scotland, an Irish missionary named Ethernan withdrew to a cave in order to
decide whether to establish a priory on May Island, directly opposite, in the
Firth of Forth, or pursue a hermit’s solitude. His decision would have been
informed by the realities of war, religious colonization, and ideas of
progress, power, and corruption, and complicated by personal interest, grief,
confusion, and a faith (religious and secular) under extreme duress.
What
becomes interesting about this shift is one of approach, as Solie evolves, more
overtly, from a writer who crafts poems into collections into a writer who
crafts a collection constructed out of individual poems; becoming, at least for
this singular project, a poet utilizing the book as her unit of composition. That
isn’t to suggest that her prior collections—Short Haul Engine (London ON: Brick Books, 2001), Modern and Normal (Brick Books, 2005), Pigeon (Anansi, 2009) and TheRoad In Is Not the Same Road Out (Anansi, 2015), as well as The Living Option: Selected Poems
(Northumberland UK: Bloodaxe Books, 2013) [see my review of such here]—aren’t conceived
as or don’t hold together as book-units, but the difference remains on The Caiplie Caves’’ focus on both a historical
figure, the hermit Ethernan, and the remote Caves of Caiplie, where he chose to
contemplate, situated north of Edinburgh along the country’s eastern coast. As Solie
writes of the historically-evasive Ethernan as part of her preface: “A number
suggest he was an Irish missionary to Scotland who withdrew to the Caves in the
mid-7th century in order to decide whether to commit to a hermit’s
solitude or establish a priory on May Island. This choice, between life as a ‘contemplative’
or as an ‘active,’ was not an unusual one to take up among his cohort.” The
poems use the contemplation of that choice, between a contemplative versus an
active life, as a way to speak both to what is believed to be Ethernan’s
historical context as well as contemporary concerns, asking what, indeed,
denotes activity, and examining the unexamined life, as in the poem “ORIGIN
STORY,” that includes:
To make our own the righteous anger
that keeps some people alive
feels like doing something
so grief and fear don’t stir
under their blanket, don’t open their eyes.
So survival does not seem merely accidental
to the indecision when to lay down
the earthly burdens, the way a quality is
accidental
to a substance —
In an interview conducted by Daniel Fraser and posted September 28, 2018 at The Rumpus, she speaks to the tension in
her work between the relationship, as Fraser suggests, between nature and human
life:
The
Rumpus:
I want to start by asking you about what appears to me to be one of the
prevailing tensions in your poems: the relationship between nature and human
life. More specifically, the sense of nature as a force that lurks beneath
modernity and continually breaks through the surface.
Karen
Solie:
I suppose I see the tension not in terms of forces at odds, but in the belief
that human endeavor is separate from the natural world. We are natural
creatures, and all creatures alter their environments. I suspect that
separating the natural from the “man-made” has allowed us to distance
ourselves, to neglect the implications of our technology, to compartmentalize
our responsibility.
We can see the surface of Mars now (and leave
junk there), but down here our problem-solving has been narrowed by power
interests. If human life and nature are distinct entities, it allows us to
prioritize. Prioritizing “progress” has served colonial enterprises very well.
If we think of nature and the human as each going about its business, we can
more easily rationalize climate change as an acceptable cost; or, in an absurd
extension of this, insist that it has nothing to do with us, that islands of
plastic in the ocean don’t exist. It allows us to treat wilderness as a playground,
to exoticize people we characterize as closer to it, who we then associate with
acceptable costs.
“Nature” is that which “feeds our souls,” which seems an apt metaphor. Remember that
Simpsons’ episode in which a classroom filmstrip diagram of “The Food Chain”
shows arrows from all creatures pointing to the human’s stomach? Once in awhile
we are forced into awareness of our place in the system, the fact that we are
not the end point in the food chain. As climate and environmental events have
demonstrated, we don’t have the last word. The fastest and easiest response to
this fact is avoidance or hysterical denial. So, in what little poetry—my
poetry, anyway—can do, I hope to keep alive, or at least gesture toward, the
tension of complexity, complication, responsibility.
Solie
writes of isolation, the slippery structures of human interactions, violence
and tragedy, and what might cause both body and soul to retreat. “Hatred is a
plotting emotion,” she writes, in the poem “KENTIGERN AND THE ROBIN”: “and
gleefully inclusive.” She writes the landscape and weather as physical
characters, sometimes violent and occasionally overpowering, but also capable
of great empathy, capable of providing refuge. While it is entirely speculation
on my part, I know, I wonder if there is a correlation between the contemplative
life that Ethernan considered, seeking insight on the role and responsibilities
of the individual, especially in regards to a spiritual life, and Solie
herself, who has famously participated in numerous residencies and retreats
over the years, some of which have been full-on retreats (as opposed to a
straight residency, which includes interacting with student writers). [CORRECTION/EDIT: Karen Solie points out that she has never actually attended or participated in a writer's retreat] And to
step further into that argument, what becomes the role of poetry and the poet
when climate change and politics overwhelm both conversation and the news
cycle? Perhaps these questions are unanswerable, or miss the point entirely. Still:
when one is removed, even slightly, from one’s normal world, it can be easier
to catch the fuller picture of that world, allowing an insight that might have
been otherwise missed, as she writes in the poem “THE SHAGS, WHOSE CONSERVATION
STATUS IS ‘OF LEAST / CONCERN’”:
On vertebral rock near Caiplie Caves
like shreds of an outline or shadows freed
of their antecedents, they dry their wings,
eyes closed, faces to the sun. Centre of no
universe, they have the run of the great
ancillary.
Through likely they loom large in the
imagination
of the sand eel whose peripheries
they torment. As their shouting did mine
wee hours in the silt of my own domain before
the chicks fledged, presumably, the parents
moved on. And I missed them then, as we do
the ones loved best when not around.
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