A Wild Peculiar Joy: the Selected Poems
by Irving Layton ISBN: 077104948X
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: A Wild Peculiar Joy: The Selected Poems by Zach WellsIrving Layton is Canada's greatest poet and was, at one time, easily
the most famous-or infamous-and popular of our writers. He has been
a Yeatsian "public man" in a way that no other Canadian
poet has. His work, which evinces an ambition for, and faith in,
the transformative potential of art sorely absent in most of our
contemporary verse, has been translated into a dozen languages and
he was twice nominated for the Nobel Prize (by South Korea and
Italy). He has written at least a couple of dozen poems that merit
favourable comparison with any best of twentieth century poet's
efforts.
Although limited selections of his work have remained in print since
he stopped writing-due to age and illness-in 1989, his reputation
has suffered over the past couple of decades. The blame for this
is attributable, in no small part, to Layton himself. As his fame
peaked, he left his skills to drift and became indiscriminate in
publishing his output. When his prolific work no longer shocked an
increasingly liberal-minded and cosmopolitan Canadian populace, he
went to greater lengths to be shocking. His poetry and his personae
elided one another and politically correct ideologues began dismissing
the poetry as the product of an arrogant misanthrope and sexist
boor. Even those who remember him fondly are apt to speak more of
how charismatic and sexy he was than of the brilliance of his poems.
Now, fifteen years since Layton laid down his pen-at 92, in the
grip of advanced Alzheimer's, he lives in a nursing home in Montreal-we
should be able to start carding Layton the man from Layton the poet.
This is precisely why I'm disappointed to see a reprint of A Wild
Peculiar Joy. Aside from a brief introduction by academic Sam Solecki
and a selection of prose excerpts of Layton on poetry, the text is
identical to the 1989 edition, in which Layton contributed to the
editorial process. There are many sub-par later poems included here
and many fine earlier pieces left out. Reading, in particular, his
bellicose Zionist rhetoric, such as "For My Sons, Max and
David", in which he advises the eponymous lads to "Be
gunners in the Israeli Air Force", one is tempted to ask of
Layton, as he did of Neruda's softness on Stalin, where his
"shit-detector" was. To be sure, most of the poems that
made Layton's name are here, but if a single volume of his work was
to be re-issued, A Red Carpet for the Sun, his selected poems
published in 1959, would have been a better, less diluted, choice.
What is really needed is a substantial re-engagement with Layton's
entire oeuvre. Because of his prodigious and variegated output-what
George Woodcock aptly characterized as his protean nature-Layton
is not a poet well-suited to slim selections, which are bound to
betray an editor's bias towards one Layton or another. As Layton
himself said in "Expurgated Edition", "No way could
you make a selection,/ choosing this detail and censoring that."
What is needed now, as daunting as the prospect might be, is a
complete edition of Layton's work, along the lines of Wilkinson's
Heresies. If any of our poets has earned such a treatment, it is
he, but we will no doubt have to wait until Layton the man leaves
us for this to happen. In the meantime, A Wild Peculiar Joy is the
best we've got. Readers looking for a more concentrated distillation
of the poet's earlier work should seek out The Porcupine's Quill
re-issue of The Improved Binoculars, still in print, or secondhand
copies of A Red Carpet for the Sun.
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