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lie. Life is flowing away from him in
all directions. The moment is empty, and unavoidable"
("Writing Poems" 21).
he first ten poems in the
book, all gloomy ones, have a long, proselike line--no
light bouncing rhythms of youth
here. It is a sombre march, apparently to the grave, with a
few too many abstract nouns and
not enough concrete images.
loating Bridge," the
second part of the book, continues in the same vein.
"Spring" (33) finds Norris out of
tune with the happy season and in "A Question of Time" (39),
the alienation is of a cosmic
magnitude: "The universe doesn't care; it has its
order/and/we are only noise in the
street./We check our watches, and depart." The poem was
written on New Year's day 1986:
not an auspicious beginning to the year.
et this section is more
positive than the last. The consolation comes from art. If
life has nothing to offer, then
there is poetry, a refuge from the decay that life inflicts.
Andre Dawson can have bad knees
and end up playing for those eternal losers the Chicago
Cubs, but in The poem that bears
his name (37) he is young forever, like a figure on Keats'
Grecian urn. But Norris is still
not sure that art is preferable to life, or that it is
acceptable to find refuge from
life in art. "The Drama of the heart's Debate with
Actuality" (45) lashes out at the notion of art as escapism: "We know the world,
but it is not the world/we desire...We are overly dramatic,/create high tragedy/where
there is only life." We do not desire the world? Or
the world we have is not the one we
desire? I favour the latter reading.
he title of part three,
"Crossroads," suggests an occasion for decision. But most
of the poems in the section are a
part of the debate and not its resolution. In "The Poems
Still
 
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