This is cynical,
but typical of Norris' penchant for stating things in an
outrageous way in his debate with himself.
he second topic, the search for unity, was
handled metaphorically in Vegetables. Here Norris approaches it
in a more direct manner. Several poems exhibit a need to
reach out, coupled with feelings of emptiness or
restlessness. "In The Supermarket" (43-45) tells of falling
in love with a "pig-tailed beauty" (93) while shopping. But
he fails to make contact and is left with a comic parody of
romantic despair brought on by unrequited love: "All the way
home/I long for her company at dinner" (45).
n "Europe" (65-66) he seeks unsuccessfully to
fill the emptiness with high culture: "In the Tate I
encounter/Blake's illustrations.../There aren't enough/of
them" (66). This persona of the culturally bankrupt North
American who travels to other cultures to find fulfilment
and fails becomes an important feature of two books in the
"Report" project: The Better Part of
Heaven (1984)
and Islands (1986).
inally, in "Walking Around" (69-70) he uncovers a
life of complete spiritual emptiness
I don't
want to continue being a root in the darkness,
wavering, extended, sleepily shivering
going
down to the moist entrails of the earth,
absorbing and thinking, eating everyday.
(69)
he conflicts are unresolved, but that
irresolution is a part of Norris' attraction as a poet. He
is wise enough to avoid the simple solutions and optimistic
enough to believe that there will be time enough to work on
the problem.
 
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