TDR Essay: Comfort and Canadian
Poetryby Alex Boyd
I’ve sometimes noticed trivial themes and topics in
Canadian poetry, and have spent time trying to determine if this is
overconfidence, a certain lack of dedication, or something else. I’ve
concluded that while dedication to poetry is admirable, beyond that
there is a kind of dedication (within poetry) that helps a poet
determine what’s meaningful and valid, what’s worth writing about
and what’s worthy of the valuable time a reader selectively gives
away. In discussing poetry, Canadian or otherwise, we sometimes speak
vaguely about talent, dazzling metaphors or images. But I believe this
kind of selective process, in choosing what to write about, is at least
as important an ingredient in good poetry.
Consider the work of Goran Simic, the Bosnian Serb now
living in Canada who writes, in Sprinting From the Graveyard, about
his experiences during the siege of Sarajevo. Here are the first lines
of a poem called The Mice of War:
By the second summer of the war
a million mice lived in the town:
two million, ten…
XXXXXXXXXXXXBut at night,
rats came out of the sewers
to swarm on hills of garbage;
they tore-up cats, they mobbed children.
And compare this to the first section of a poem from
the book China Blues by David Donnell, with the title Call it
a Day:
My friend Moira
is tall & thin & with small breasts & a
beautiful
excitable face.
We get up around 7:00
& go to Andrew’s house on Indian road for
breakfast.
This is Saturday morning before the ball game.
& Phillip says,
"O, you must try these waffles, Queen
Victoria would have gained 100 lbs on these
but they’re wonderful."
So we have waffles
with chocolate ice cream & champagne. It’s a
celebration
of something, & it’s a great combination.
Donnell is a Governor General’s award winning
Canadian poet, and while I’m obviously not catching him at his best,
the very fact that I can flip through one of his books and find this
poem says something. It’s impossible to find an irrelevant poem in Sprinting
from the Graveyard, in which every poem is tightly woven and
important, contributing to an astonishing and powerful book.
At a time when poetry is fighting to be consumed
alongside so many other forms of expression and needs (more than ever)
to work against the cliché of pointless self-indulgence, some poets
unfortunately decide to obsess with irrelevancies. We are sometimes
blissfully unaware that even the best poem about a crappy day (or a nice
day with waffles and chocolate, for that matter) won’t compare with a
less conventional experience or something of real insight and value. As
someone exposed, the vast majority of the time, to Canadian poetry, I’ve
wondered if this habit of wandering into the trivial has some
environmental causes. Many Canadians have enjoyed relative ease and
comfort for decades, certainly in comparison to some other countries. In
this context of comfort, Canadians have the option of concentrating on
larger, worthwhile themes some people in the rest of the world have no
time for. The other option is to use poetry to note the trivial details
of our lives, which can really only pale in comparison to the concerns
of the less fortunate, or those Canadians who are more selective.
To provide another example, I pull the Susan Musgrave
book Things That Keep and Do Not Change off my shelf, which has
some worthwhile poems. And yet it pauses in the middle of the book to
dive into a trilogy of poems with titles like "Sex after
Sixty," which begins "That got your attention, didn’t
it?" Ten lines later she admits "but I digress," and it
seems odd given the fact that the whole poem feels like a pointless
digression. The next two poems name drop constantly like an ongoing
inside joke and aren’t as amusing or insightful as they think they
are. Michael Crummey has a number of excellent poems in Arguments
with Gravity, but feels somehow compelled to include "David
Donnell’s Schlong" in the same book.
I am, of course, speaking in generalizations, and I
know it is not a difficult task to find a worthwhile Canadian poem. It
would also be much easier to find trivial poems by foreign poets were it
not the case that only the best of them are translated and distributed
here. Still, I believe that Canadian poets need to be careful. It isn’t
my intention to suggest that there is no place for humour in poetry,
only that Canadians need to remember that humour, like anything else,
can be relevant and more than just a winking inside joke, or a
demonstration of the cleverness of the poet. It also isn’t my
intention to suggest that Canadians need to go to war in order to write
good poetry. It’s simply that poets don’t do themselves or poetry
any favours when they write about trivial matters. Also, if it is the
case the Canadians are more susceptible to this because of our comfort
(if there is even a chance that we operate on a different scale, that
what we call important is actually closer to trivial), then we need to
act with that much extra caution. Canada has enjoyed a fairly
comfortable existence for decades. At the same time new forms of
self-expression and entertainment continued to grow. It strikes me as
fair to conclude that poetry began to compete with more and more at a
time in history when we were more likely to use poetry as a method of
self-indulgence because of our comfort. And so we get examples like the
poem above by Donnell that manages to come across as overconfident,
trivial and cliché all at the same time.
It may simply be the case that even the best poets
sometimes write bad poems and assume they’re valuable. Or possibly our
culture has put poetry at such a distance (and appears so much fonder of
popular culture these days) that poets assume nobody is listening
anyway. It does seem that the nation, as a whole, only pays attention to
poetry only at times of crisis, when it is felt that only poetry (or
perhaps poetic speechmaking) will be eloquent and healing enough. Poetry
is pushed away most of the time, then wheeled out when we need meaning
and the most articulate words possible to provide comfort. But there is
no excuse for poets to be supporting the idea (consciously or not) that
poetry is irrelevant and self-indulgent. And any decent poet should know
that however immediate and trendy popular culture might be, most of it
fades away, while good poetry might just make a more lasting connection
with an audience.
There are poets, Canadian and otherwise, who focus on
worthwhile themes and ideas. Sometimes I wonder if some of the most
revered and respected poets were given a tremendous boost by simply
paying attention to this, being selective about what is written, or at
the very least what’s published. The only way to build a reputation as
consistently worthwhile is to be selective. To begin with, poets can be
certain that they are extremely careful when writing about themselves,
can be certain that every poem practices empathy with something or
someone instead of just their own problems. They should be making
attempts to clarify and capture more than just the personal problems or
anecdotes they assume are fascinating. Here is a short poem by Carmine
Starnino, simply titled The Last Days:
When the nurse let go, my aunt
stood there, disoriented, swaying a little
from side to side, and we understood
that for one more day she had been
returned to us, her body given back
to the world. My uncle, waiting behind her,
smiled with the excitement of a father
watching his daughter’s first steps
as my aunt tottered toward the vase
of flowers by the window, taking one step
then another, squinting into the sunlight
that warmed the hospital room, filling it
with the rich fragrance of lilac.
Starnino is in this poem, but only as the observer,
only to relate the scene with a great deal of empathy. Secondly, this
poem is no simple anecdote that could just as easily have been told to
us over a beer somewhere. In his book The Collected Works of Billy
the Kid, Michael Ondaatje sidesteps this kind of problem by writing
in completely different voices. However it’s done, exactly, poets need
to remember the words of Alden Nowlan, who could have been thinking of
exactly this when he wrote Johnnie’s Poem:
Look! I’ve written a poem!
Johnnie says
and hands it to me
and it’s about
his grandfather dying
last summer, and me
in the hospital
and I want to cry,
don’t you see, because it doesn’t matter
if it’s not very good:
what matters is he knows
and it was me, his father, who told him
you write poems about what
you feel deepest and hardest.
Alex Boyd is a Toronto writer of
poems, essays and fiction. |