My Shoes Are Killing Me by Robyn Sarah, Biblioasis, 2015, 65 pages
“Something’s missing”
Robyn Sarah once wrote “A good poem always knows more about
itself than even its author does. If parts of it seem
baffling, the cue is not to be afraid, but to ask the poem what they
mean.” What parts of Sarah's poems in My Shoes Are Killing Me mean cannot be
considered separately from her larger themes of time and memory and her habitual insistence upon the Now: to feel the weight of
each moment in her life and to convert this into poetry so that readers feels
it in theirs. These include historical moments felt by many Canadians over
their radios in “The Dominion Observatory Time Signal (`The beginning of the
long dash following ten seconds of silence’).” More compelling are
softer, less ironic moments, “the last/unevaporated dewdrop in the grass/among the little
shaggy heads of clover” and, of course, Sarah’s moments with her favourite
people:
children outside in pajamas
in the endless twilights
parents on the front stoops
calling door to door, one to another
time of no hurry – a life of moments
we didn’t cherish enough.
Moments with children are what we most often like about
Sarah’s poems. Missing from this collection are regrets that sometimes emerge alongside her solicitude
for children, notably those in her oft-cited poem “Maintenance.” Intriguingly present
are sharper feelings of rebellion against the inescapable
indenture ordinary things have upon our lives: Sarah's reverence for children may remain
intact, her salutary vision of things does not; joy in the everyday is disrupted,
windy trees, canopies filled with birds
and “garage sales all up and down the block” producing instead a “homesickness… for
the days/when all this mattered, for the way
it mattered.” By this Sarah signals an even more extraordinary shift away from her usual complaints about a retreating natural world, pushing aside “the end of
summer’s endlessness,” for something larger, more unsettling, and as insidious
as a snake.
a movement
in the corner of the eye
of something dappled and sinuous, fleeting,
cornucopia of smells wafting in
through the summer screen door,
and something was missing now
from what used to be enough,
when did we first notice
it wasn’t enough?
What is missing from what used to be enough but no longer is? And
who are the “we” who once enjoyed what had been enough but who failed to see it
was not? For all our familiarity with Sarah’s themes of summer ending, the
wasting aspects of time and of death, we're cut adrift from questions like these. “We seem to have left,” she writes, “all
familiar ground”
That’s the limb
I happen to be out on – the blue man
in the green world, who when asked
by the green man what he was doing there,
replied, “Me? I’m from another story."
“Another story” reinforces an emerging theme of something missing
in the stories Sarah’s poems used to whisper in her ear, the “cue” to its
baffling nature interpolated with other “familiar ground” routinely tilled:
time and memory, now spread up against the backdrop of the artist’s own
declining time, “It was the beginning of knowing/we were running out of days”:
and sometimes I thought I could hear
a different wind stirring in the trees,
and sometimes I thought one could learn
to find Enough again,
to let what-used-to-be-enough
(summer’s cup running out)
be enough – given a few more years.
As I've suggested above, it’s hard not to consider questions of what is “missing” or “enough”
without reflecting upon a central concern Sarah shares with other poets: their sense
of time and the diminishing opportunities to fill time with a sufficiently
meaningful and fully developed body of work able to withstand time. The ultimate litmus test is how well the poet’s sensibility has been trained on the full scope of life so that it
can be contained in her work and always within sight of what is most telling
about the poet and reader’s shared experience, that which is most human. In
other words, that which, by any one’s estimation, should be more than enough.
But is it? Has Sarah hit on something beyond the blueness of the blue man?
We never really find out. The book reinforces Sarah’s reputation
as one of the finest lyric poets this country has ever produced and yet her unwillingness
to exploit this very compelling thread is what’s missing from the book itself,
reducing the poems to unquestionably well-crafted mood pieces, when so much
more might be achieved by following that thread to deeper, fresher truths. Instead, the shift away from the
normal bucolic quality of her work towards an area of thought she plainly might
pursue but chooses not to, renders the book’s overall achievement incomplete.
It’s an impression that only deepens as Sarah pursues
another area of thought which she also abandons and with which she concludes
her book - the poem “Belief,” containing Sarah’s ambivalent philosophical stance on free agency. “Two mysteries” pertain, she writes: “a dry,
curled leaf boat…pushed to and fro by imperceptible stirrings of the air” and “a
single leaf, nodding and nodding as if by its own volition, on an otherwise
motionless tree.” “More than a word,” she finishes, “I would as lief be/one of
these leaves,” suggesting a re-evaluation of what it means to be someone who
uses words, a potential repudiation of language in favour of greater existential
certainty - and a final inability to choose. Too often poetry is what we do when
we can’t make up our minds about the world.
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5 comments:
Perhaps she's afraid to cross the threshold - only to discover a supreme fiction ..
Hmmmm...that's intriguing...which fiction (there are so many)? Why supreme?
Stevens - she hints at it with the "blue" man ...
Ok. I get that. I finished reading Notes Towards a Supreme Fiction" and I think you’re right. There is a fundamental separation between the world and what we make of it. In our poetry, language, in our conceptualizations and mythologies. My take anyway.
Si. Only our imagination can make anything of the phenomenal world.
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