To the Un World
stumble stoop
stutter-clog
musty muse music
to unknown woods
I would a stargazer,
would a bison-memory be
fringe of spindles on
clear-cut ridge
cross river recross
back slip back sneak
unthread Canadia
wiring small glass cones
cockeyed track-side
concrete ties
make cents, boy and
granddad
play chess, what’s hidden
from this
pink bunched glimpse of
fireweed
song of innocence, song
of despair
for tankers, hoppers,
containers
feeding ten million
mouths
song of claim, song of
emptiness
song of illusion, song of
madness
wiring usless us along
through unspoken
not dis-hidden watching
camouflaged eyes
Vancouver
poet, editor and publisher Meredith Quartermain’s latest is the poetry title Lullabies in the Real World (Edmonton AB: NeWest Press, 2020), a collection that “reflects
and refracts Canada from diverse angles, and challenges colonizing literatures
such as the Odyssey and various canonical British and US voices. As it moves
from west to east, the book journeys back in time to interrogate historical
events such as the Battle of the Plains of Abraham and the exclusion of the Acadians.
It ends by imagining a time before or outside colonization.” On the surface,
that description reads as highly ambitious, working to articulate and interrogate
a variety of historical social and political upheavals and connecting those
upheavals to the shape of the contemporary landscape. Quartermain is the author
of numerous poetry books and chapbooks over the past twenty years, including Spatial
Relations (Diaeresis, 2001), A Thousand Mornings (Nomados, 2002), The
Eye-Shift of Surface (Greenboathouse Books, 2003), Vancouver Walking
(NeWest Press, 2005), Matter (BookThug, 2008), Nightmarker
(NeWest Press, 2008) and Recipes from the Red Planet (BookThug, 2010),
and a number of threads have emerged from her work, including an engagement
with the prose line, a lyric of strolling and observing (akin to Beaudelaire’s
flâneur), and an engagement with a broad range of considerations around her “local.”
For her Lullabies in the Real World, Quartermain broadens her scope
across a great physical and historical distance, writing across the length of
west to east—the Siege of Quebec and the Plains of Abraham, Louis Riel, Cabot’s
Trail, crossing the Rocky Mountains, the Red River Rebellion, the Group of
Seven and multiple other points, references, individuals and moments—as a
sequence of jumping off points, writing slant on state violence and racist
policies and actions, asking how one could ever expect calm to emerge from such
fury, and peace to emerge from punching down. “the weather hazy,” she writes,
to end the poem “Captain Montrésor with General Wolfe on the River,” “wind
fresh / the weather clear, wind foul, tide-flood making / the weather foggy /
the weather clear [.]”
There’s
an enormous amount of play in her language, reveling in a collage of sound,
meaning and reference, such as the opening poem, “Unreal to real,” that writes:
“Buy low. Sky blue. Who’s it? Not you, / lift the latch crosspatch / of
Prufrock’s Xanadu / Xanada Canadu. / Wheel your red barrow / in Blake’s
cathedral / bpNichol St Rains St Ruggles.” Through poems set in six sections,
Quartermain writes to bpNichol, imagines marching up the Saint John River, and writes
of Saskatchewan grain elevators. Quartermain writes of an array of diverse
voices, activities and actions set aside by the thin lines of acknowledged
history that her poems work to claim, re-claim and set back into conversation,
collecting them together into a book-length collaged portrait of a landscape
both real and imagined, official and unacknowledged. And, as the final poem in
the collection, “Standing on Cabot’s Trail,” ends:
I wish this wish were not
clumsy, vain
lurched blindnesses
called words
I wish it were music by Coltrane
or Shostakovich
I wish it could
counterpoint all at once every language
of every planet, animal, bacteria, mineral and molecule
and somehow pour out like
a milky way
from this upsidedown canoe
of a beak
these diamond eyes
rowling in my head
this tumbleweed tail
these usless wingstubs
you would hear it
you would put down your
guns
No comments:
Post a Comment