Lost August: Poems
by Esta Spalding
House of Anansi Press, 1999
Review by Shane Neilson
Esta Spalding is a Vancouver poet/screenwriter whose new book,
Lost
August (Anansi, 1999) attempts to build on the early success of a thus-far
prodigal career. Her first book of poetry, Carrying Place (1995,
Anansi) was nominated for the Gerald Lampert Award and went into multiple
printings. In the same year she was awarded the prestigious Long Poem
Prize by the Malahat Review for "aperture". She built on this success
with a remarkable book consisting of a single long poem titled Anchoress
(Anansi, 1997) which garnered her the Canadian Booksellers Association
Libris award for Best Specialty Book of the Year.
It tells the unorthodox tale of a zoologist working in the basement
of a Vancouver aquarium where he enters into a journal fragments of the
previous life he possessed with his wife, dead a year before. It is a
reminiscence, an introspective investigation allowing for narrative enlightenment.
It is also a complex, wide-ranging (from WWII to the Gulf War to present-day)
and rewarding work. With such a resume one expects Lost August to confidently
deliver skilled language, an expectation bolstered by the promising inclusion
of two award-winning poems within the volume, the aforementioned "aperture"
and also the League of Canadian Poet's National Poetry Contest-winning
"Bee Verse" of 1998.
Lost August's introduction - August - or was it August - reiterates
the theme of uncertainty and confusion first presented in the title of
this "lost" book. The book is divided into three sections, the first entitled
"Everywhere the river &". It begins with a poem dedicated to Michael Ondaatje
(Spalding's father-in-law) called "Apart, I Send You News of Lions". This
poem in a concrete sense portrays a woman remembering her separated lover,
recalling how he'd study frescoes. It continues the theme of loss not
only within its own title ("Apart") but also with its beginning lines:
Each moment is twinned,
you said, each apart
from each.
If you listen, there
are two
rivers. We inhabit
nothing
so much as loss.
The next stanza reiterates this theme: "There, a warrior rides/ into
absence, province/ of the heart." While documenting emotional and physical
divisions between a couple, it simultaneously presents one partner's concept
of the impossibility of "oneness" or fusion of souls between two lovers,
instead insisting that perception is divided into two but in two capacities...
the first existing within one person's gaze in terms of what they see
and what they do not see. The second is the artful dramatization of the
differing perspectives of the poem's protagonist couple, a unit in name
yet paradoxically not so, accomplished by Spalding by having the other
lover denying this point, stating:
Will you see
how you are wrong:
both
rivers, the same rive
in us, the very one.
The volume of meaning crammed into such a short poem bespeaks her
intelligence and is typical of her work. In the second poem of the book,
the feted "aperture", Spalding introduces bees for the first time:
...the morning light
was distilled by bees
who worked in darkness,
stealing
sour milk kerosene,
and axle grease...
The bees, small factories
made the wretched sweet.
Bees are a recurring image, particularly in the third section of the
book. Such "image repetition" reveals the mechanics of Spalding's style:
images recur and recur again according to her method of poetic layering
or patterning. This technique infuses each image with a degree of meaning
upon their respective initial occurrence; Spalding then invokes the reader's
memory of that image when reintroducing the same image later in the collection,
always slightly modifying it by differing context and thereby adding richness
while avoiding redundance. This process heightens the enjoyment of the
poetry by providing continuity and also by encouraging a diligent reader
to reread the book upon its completion in order to acquire the full weight
of Spalding's poetic intent. "Canoe" builds on the river image introduced
in the first section's title and repeated in antecedent poems "Apart,
I Send You News of Lions", "aperture" and "Archaeology" by casting it
as a sexual force. "Canoe" is gently erotic. Spalding writes,
That moment before
sleep steals
him, that moment he
is in her
face pressed between
collarbone
& neck, a moment she
holds
his still breathing
form- he turns into a river.
"Canoe" continues with further sexual river imagery evoked in fluid
language.
She will dive under
water like sleep
holding her breath,
feeling the river's pressing
embrace, lie on her
back, stare at the star's fingerprints.
Someone wrote that Canadians were the only people who could successfully
make love in a canoe. Spalding's version of this is,
She presses her fingers
into
his skin & glides out
as a canoe
will just part the
surface that closes
over its stern.
Spalding employs syntactical innovation in many poems, among these
"November 3:57", "Another Love Poem in Which the Neighbours Complain",
and "Marriage in the Last Days". "ALPIWTNC" is somewhat self-explanatory,
and it differs from "Canoe" in that it definitely is not gentle:
...o the steam whistling
like a bullet when love's struck
& the neighbours should
complain
we're putting holes
in the walls.
Spalding's skill at capturing intense, passionate sex without descent
into blunt pornography is artful. Read these at night.
The book is marred only by occasional missteps. "Passing Through"
is overly whimsical. A mid-poem switch to a past where two sets of parents
give birth to children resulting in the eventual writing of this poem
by one of these progeny to the other is jarring due to the absolute lack
of "build", or foundation occurring at the beginning of the poem. It is
also heavily imagistic and colour-drunk.
In "May, Pregnant", the finest poem in the collection, Spalding's
title indicates a season of birth and reinforces this with "Pregnant".
In the poem's body she writes, "...dogwoods bloom, spilling/ cups of pink
milk onto/ the swollen asphalt". "Bloom", "milk" and "asphalt" all serve
to deepen the gravid imagery. The poem continues, "...Sprung from berths,/
the ships with full-/ bellied sails/ move in one direction...Mother, May
I?" The pun of "berths", the "full-bellied"ness hinted at here and "Mother,
May I" again enrich and build the poem's imagery of new life. Such imagery
continues until Spalding uses contrast to shock us: "...Once/ it flowers
the swarm/ comes, hungry./ It's death who breathes the first/ air into
our lungs". This wondrously paradoxical anchor at the end of the poem,
the spectre of death, is on a magnitude of eloquence that supersedes much
modern poetry.
"Each Girl, the one", the second section of the book, documents the
intoxication of youth, replete with romanticism tempered by nightmarish
contrasts. In "Or the Eye", Spalding writes evocatively of the scenery
surrounding her as she and a childhood friend walk in the rain, concluding
the poem with
the heron hunting
still the path
that worms between
trees
last year when we
were here
three men knee deep
in mud
digging for the missing
boy-.
"Winter Orchid" also mirrors this pattern.
The last section entitled "a yellow dress" consists of several long
poems, the most notable of these being "Bee Verse". A well-crafted poem
that has the interesting effect of layering itself by beginning with a
few lines on a page, followed by the same fragment (though subtly altered)
at the start of a larger one, "Bee Verse"'s very structure mirrors the
poem's internal movements of bees moving back and forth across field,
returning to their hive (the initial portion of the poem) and building
on it but also altering its core.
Many more worthy poems exist in Lost August. The book not only succeeds
in meeting expectations, it surpasses them with sexily descriptive poetics,
with layered images reinforcing the poetic backbone of the book as a whole,
and with concise, innovative syntax.
Shane
Neilson is one of The Danforth Review's poetry editors.
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