Go
Leaving Strange
by Patrick Lane
Harbour Publishing, 2004
Reviewed by Shane Neilson
There are three kinds of poets. The
first (and largest) group never find a ‘voice’, or more specifically
that means of expression peculiar to the individual poet, a set of
thematic and technical mannerisms imprinted on every poem. Such poets
spend their talent-challenged lives crafting nondescript and derivative
poems that could have been written by anyone. Then there is a second
grouping of pets who manage to acquire a voice but, after finding one,
are doomed to repeat themselves in book after book. In the most extreme
of cases, like that of Al Purdy, a mentor of Patrick Lane, the ‘voice’-
once so inimitable, unmistakeable, lively- devolves into perpetual
self-parody. Finally, there is a third grouping of poets that, upon
acquiring a style, first exhaust and then relinquish it in favour of
seeking out another.
Patrick Lane is a distinguished member
of the second grouping of poets. He has found his ‘voice’, and he
has honed and perfected it throughout the course of his 20-odd books,
all of which reflect an undeviating sameness, a fixed propensity to deal
with subject matter like violence, substance abuse, physical labour,
poverty, and wildlife. Lane’s poetry, when taken in totalis, is
monumentally monochromatic.
After reading the Lane oeuvre a few
years ago, I felt that the biggest limiting factor to his career as an
artist has been the inability to evolve. In order to become an
international player, I thought, the old voice must go, and a new one
must take its place. I therefore hoped that his next book would be a
departure; I wanted a few poems about cows on the moon appearing next to
political poems and villanelles. Anything surprising and, well, strange.
Instead, Go Leaving Strange
shows that Patrick Lane, after thousands of poems and two dozen books,
isn’t about to change now. The places the reader is taken are
familiar, for Lane has written multiples of these kinds of poems
already. He starts of his collections stereotypically with
"Howl":
The wolves howl with a loneliness
that is only theirs.
The coyotes howl with the same
wish.
The solitary loons too on the
mountain lakes.
I have heard them among the hills
and the far valleys.
There is no sound like theirs.
I know you cannot imagine what it
is like.
I know you cannot believe anything
alive can make that sound.
But you will, you will.
So: wolves, coyotes, mountains,
loneliness - these images and feelings are Lane’s stock in trade. The
sixth line is, no doubt, meant to be taken at face value, but I confess
to being credulous. I can imagine what "it" is like, because
Lane has done "it" before ad infinitum. The last three lines
seem to be saying that "the rest of the book will show you what
loneliness really is" but they do not acknowledge that we have
already been shown. And, I regret to say, we’ve been shown "it"
better.
The book is divided into two sections,
the first composed of glaringly under-edited and overlong prose poems
compromised by unmediated anecdote. What these poems attempt is to tell
stories, and they were best meant for that form. For example, "The
War", a poem about Lane’s meeting and exchanging of life stories
with an immigrant potter, derails when Lane interrupts the telling with,
…The heat/ and a single fly he
caught in the middle of the telling, his one hand/ holding what was
left of the bread and his other, the left one, coming/ behind the
fly and then sweeping slowly, catching the fly as it rose/ backwards
as flies do when they first lift from what they rest on, bread/ the
crumbs fallen on the slick surface of the table, a lick of wet
butter./ He held his fist to my ear so I could hear the buzzing/
then flung the fly to the floor, the single sharp click of its body/
breaking there. And the story going on, the fly an interruption…
This is a paragraph of a
digression; is there room for such monster-size digression in a poem?
Unmusical, with awkward phrasing ("backwards as flies do when they
first lift from what they rest on") and irredeemably prosy, Lane
crams in too much anecdotal detail, overburdening the poems with
content.
Yet when not strictly ‘telling the
tale,’ so to speak, but rather editorializing/kitchen-table
philosophizing, Lane can compound his blunders with mystical groaners
like this one in "Weeds": "…The poor/ do not make
wishes, for wishes are seen as luck and luck is by its nature/ always
bad and brings consequences and so wishes are not made…" Or how
about this bit of gloopy nature-spiritualism from "The Wild
Self": "There is no understanding why a thing can stop a man
in his life,/ but it can… but most often it is a thing that comes from
the sea or the land,/ and so has some purity to it, some part of it
retaining its wild self,/ and because, even though it is broken, it is
still wild,/ and every man senses that, and that is how meaning begins…"
This reads like a new age treatise for self-improvement, an Iron John
variant. It does not make for vigorous poetry.
If it seems I am unfairly focusing on
certain narrative elements of these poems, it is only because Lane
himself makes so much of them. He writes in "Weeds": "…And
that is how it is with stories and sometimes the teller of the story
will/ try to make the story better, make it more real, and sometimes
leave someone/ out, or describe something different from what it was…"
Isn’t this a strange thing to say in a poem? It seems to me the game
has been given away, that most of these prose ‘poems’ have an undue
internal and overt emphasis on story. In the poem
"Shingle," for example, the word ‘story’ and its
variations appear five times- a deadening repetition that bludgeons the
reader into acknowledging that, yes, Lane is trying to tell a story.
Just in case we don’t comprehend, more advice on the story comes in
"Choices": "A story is what you require, a plot,/ where
what you leave out is more important than what you tell."
Indeed. But whither the poetry? It
appears that Lane is unconcerned. Would that he have heeded his own
advice, for there is much that needed to be suppressed in his lengthy
book’s 117 pages.
In The Addiction Poems, the
second section of the book, Lane makes a modest recovery. This is
because the poems here are shorter, tighter, and more controlled. His
lyric mode offers less opportunity for garrulity. The ‘stories’ of
these poems, if there are any at all, are contained by the poem,
as opposed to being the purpose of the poem, and this is how it
should be.
The blood-alcohol level and violence-ometer
-two trusty diagnostic devices when reading Lane poetry- all read
depressingly high in this section, even for Lane. "Match
Stick" is typical from a thematic point of views: "The drugs
and whiskey/ keep the table alive. Everyone is quiet/ in the stone of
their lives. You hate/ her weakness, take her in the mouth, her gagging,
the rest watching…" Lane’s canvas here in poems with titles
like "Kids and Coke" and "Curse" and "Dead
Baby" is dull and mean; the Lane voice is especially harsh,
permitting little beauty. These are difficult conditions for poetry;
many poems read like once-off violence ditties or random crime graffitis
and are exacerbated by a grimy aimlessness. Bad things happen,
perpetually; there is no purpose. In a poem, blood can be "in a boy’s
head" and a bullet can be "in a man" but we never hear of
either again. Yet there are a few poems in this section that transcend
their sordid environments and constitute the real poems of the book,
poems that do achieve a purpose- an artistic one. Such a poem is
"Tight Smoke:"
Her closed eyes talked to the walls
in a bar
I don’t want to remember, her man
with his one hand held to her
throat
like tight smoke burning,
her broken bird wings
thrashing above the sawdust floor…
In this excerpt, the subject matter
(violence against women, substance abuse) is familiar, but here Lane has
a unity of image (a woman in extremis with "broken bird
wings") and mood (the resignation of "Her closed eyes talked
to the walls in a bar"). Image and mood are punctuated by a
hopeless burst of adrenaline ("his one hand held to her throat/
like tight smoke burning.") Unfortunately, there is not much of
this kind of success to be found in the book as a whole.
Patrick Lane has become an institution
in this country, and that is exactly Patrick Lane’s problem. Go
Leaving Strange does not list an editor on its title page; this
unedited state is not doing his poetry any good. On the evidence of his
latest book, it is essential for Patrick Lane to do two things: he must
find an editor capable of prompting him to go in new directions, but
more importantly, Lane must forsake everything he knows so that a new
voice can emerge.
Shane Neilson is a poet
from New Brunswick. |