His
Life
by George Bowering
ECW,
2000
Reviewed
by T. Anders Carson
This book
is an autobiographical account of the musings and wanderings of
Mr. Bowering. From the beginning you delve into the inner-workings
of the Canadian poetry scene of late 50’s and early 60’s. I don’t
think they themselves realized that it was a scene. It was more
a gathering, a meeting, and a sharing of new work. His life flows
with the seasons.
Every title
has a season, year and place where it was written. An accounting
of where he was and what he was writing. There are some that are
striking images. One
is Winter 1958 that ends: "And
yesterday went with the ice."
All of us
know that feeling in Canada. He has captured the essence of the
solitary. There are some stark images of home life later on. Where
the silence grows in the kitchen. In the Fall of 1976 in Vancouver
these words were written;
What’s wrong
Mom says
four-year-old at the table with crayons;
Mom says to Dad very loud, " If your fucking
friend tries to give us another of these,
he can shove it up his ass." Four-year-old
looks downward.
It is a silence
that I thought only could be bred in old Bergman films. With a
few lines you know in the bottom of your stomach that those words,
that scenario wasn’t just an isolated incident. It was a progression
that culminated in a divorce. He envelops the emotions with forceful
simplicity, letting the child’s head speak volumes. Only truly
masterful writers can accomplish this in a brief scene.
Not all is
dark. There is a definitive affinity for sports that is present.
It is almost a balance to just watch a ball-game or hear another
hockey score. Spring 1983 Vancouver:
Looking forward
to sitting down
in front of the Expos
game.
There is also
a strong element of travel in many of his poems. I think that
it gives him pleasure to travel. Some writers despise the act
but he seems to thrive on accepting the beauty and radiance that
sundry travel can give you. There was a poem that definitely keeps
with this understanding of the foreign. He is in Venice Winter
1981 with his daughter and describes the setting. Again in only
a few words we can fully revel in Venice through his eyes. It
ends with:
This, he told
his daughter,
is what happens when you marry the sea.
At the end
of the collection there is a poem that mixes both the release
of sports and the beauty of poetry. Who said that poets can’t
adore the sports? That it isn’t literary. Mr. Bowering is himself
in right field. His thoughts are his own. His vision bordering
on the universal. Spring 1987 Vancouver:
In
shirtsleeves at last and standing in right field late in practice
he said it is this day that makes you glad you didn’t kill yourself
in December.
There is eternal
hope that weaves its way throughout this collection. Hope for
a better existence, hope for humanity, and hope for next year’s
fielded team. Though the entire book is set in the 3rd person
you feel as if it could have been you. Brilliant writing coupled
with lucid and revealing insight. Poetry that packs a 12th round
knockout punch.
T.
Anders Carson is an Ottawa-area poet. His poetry was featured
in The
Danforth Review #2.
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