The Mother Contends With
the Sky
Skies alive—forty
Billion tons young, from
the deep end of enchanted carbonic
shadow
Sootpuff on cheek: a
charmer, friend-of-family, La Breeze
Dust up, birds wriggle
And we flip
Pictures, and cry
Stars
Reflected with lacrimal
reflex
by lysozymic propulsion
due to an errant wingtip?
A distant spectral
emulsion
Salves the anticipation
and solitude
Of tears
Poet
and critic Louis Cabri’s latest poetry title is Hungry Sling Shots
(Vancouver BC: New Star Books, 2020). The author of The Mood Embosser
(Coach House Books, 2001), Posh Lust (New Star Books, 2014) and Poetryworld
(CUE, 2011) [see my review of such here], Cabri’s poetry has long
been propelled by sound and theory, making him one of the few language poets so
deeply engaged with how a poem sits and sounds on the page. One might mention other
contemporary Canadian poets that work so heavily with texts engaged with and
influenced by sound such as bill bissett—who engages with sound, image and
chanting, but not necessarily theory—and Adeena Karasick—who does engage with
theory, but leaning slightly, in comparison to Cabri, on the side of theory
over sound. Consider Hungry Sling Shots’ opening poem, “Video Goes Whip
Tom Kelly,” a piece that includes elements comparable to birdsong; the poem
opens: “one; two; three; four; six / hip; hip; hip hurrah boys; spring is here
/ chortle-deeeeee // chew-chew-chew / listen to my evening sing-ing-ing-ing /
tic-tic-mcgreer // shook-shook-shook-shook-shook / je-je-je-je-je-je-je /
pill-will-willet // ra-vi-o-li / kit / cheer-up; cheer-a-lee; cheer-ee-o //
whoo-eek / jeeeeeeee / check [.]” As the press release offers: “For Cabri, more
than most poets working today, meaning is all about how it sounds.” The distinction
there is interesting, suggesting sound over meaning, where a poet such as
Karasick engages with more of a blend, or even with theory over sound (the distinction
in her work might easily be negligible; the interplay of back-and-forth might instead
be the point). And yet, Cabri appears to utilize sound as a way to approach and
engage with theory. The second section, for example, is “The Mommy Collection”
(from which the poem, above, emerges), a section with the sub-header “After Roses
de Noël (1843-1878) by Théodore de Banville.”
There
is something of Cabri’s work generally that does tend to get overlooked, in
part, possibly, due to a readership that doesn’t quite know how to approach his
work, and his work offers no clues but for the work itself (which one argues
should always be more than enough): approach on the basis of sound, and see
where that might take you. Given the amount of quality work he’s produced over
the years, he’s certainly due for some deeper attention.
No comments:
Post a Comment