| A Review of: Blue Pyramids: New and Selected Poems by Robert MooreNear the end of Robert Priest's Blue Pyramids: New and Selected
Poems you'll discover a prose-like narrative poem running to several
pages called "The New Opportunity". Ostensibly autobiographical,
it tells a cautionary tale of how a poet narrowly missed having his
principles compromised by a brewery that asked him to contribute
material to a new ad campaign: "This poem is not brought to
you by Molson's," it begins, "but it was close, believe
me" Priest's speaker, with a family to support and too long
between work-in-progress grants and Canada Council B grants, fancies
himself a "new knight" being "tested by the god,"
in danger of losing the "voice [he's] kept so pure." Just
before our poet-paladin summons up the wherewithal to pluck his
mitt from Mammon's pocket, he discovers several of his favourite
Canadian poets doing a Dante-esque stint in the waiting room of
"Comfort Sound Studios." Principal among them, not
incidentally, is "The new poetry editor for a certain press"
who "wonders if he can have a look at my next book/ This
book."
A poem only by the most relaxed definition of the term, "The
New Opportunity" constitutes a rather strained little homily
on the care and maintenance of an authentic poetic voice. After
all, it's couched in a book that isn't ashamed to have itself plumped
by Mike Bullard ("A hilarious book!"), a celebrity whose
only claim to our attention is surely that he's somehow ended up
in a position to make a claim on our attention. And how are we to
assay the putative purity of a voice that can without irony proudly
eschew the tit of commercialism even while lamenting the length
between feedings from the one marked "Canada Council B
Grants"? These and sundry other reservations notwithstanding,
I'll bet this self-regarding poem slays in performance.
Why? Because a fair estimation of Priest's oeuvre-at least as
represented by the material in this collection-obliges that a
distinction be drawn at the outset between poems calculated to live
on the page and poems measured to engage a room of reasonably-attentive,
gamesome strangers. At least since the dissociation of sensibility,
we don't take in half as much with our ears as we do with our eyes;
what is therefore only mildly diverting on a page might easily
strike one on first hearing as perfectly deathless. Accordingly,
potential readers of Blue Pyramids should be advised: Robert Priest
is by all accounts an enormously gifted performer, and a significant
percentage of the poems in this collection assume the close support
of those gifts.
What Blue Pyramids most of all confirms is that Robert Priest is
not only a master of light verse, but a dab hand at even lighter
verse. With respect to the former, the series of poems included
here on parts of the body are a bona fide hoot and the book's eight
installments of what he calls his "Time Release
Poems"-"slogans, sayings, corrections, koans and
connections"-are, in the main, minor miracles of wit. When he
gets serious, however, he tends to get sentimental (the traditional
weakness of the clown). In "Poem for my unborn child",
for example, he solemnly puts aside irony, together with his usually
reliable ear and a manic gift for the generation of felicitous
association, to deliver stillborn tropes like the following:
"Ihave heard your heart like a frantic butterfly beating/
beautiful and full of light/ in there." If nothing else, such
lapses illustrate that Gide's oft-quoted admonition to writers-"it
is with fine sentiments that bad literature is made"-will
always be timely.
Poems which look further afield than a wife's navel for objects
upon which to arrange fine sentiment rarely fare much better.
"Meeting Place" and the collection's title poem "Blue
Pyramids: A Proposal for the Ending of Unemployment in Toronto"
succeed neither as poetry or as politics. In the latter, Priest
proposes that the unemployed be put to work erecting pyramids on
Yonge Street: "You and I know," the poem concludes,
"We must begin building/ the blue pyramids of peace."
Notwithstanding what I gather are certain pretensions to satire,
the poem's modest proposal for simultaneously ending unemployment
and creating world peace doesn't have a genuinely subversive or
Swiftian bone in its body. (Had Swift placed such confidence in
the ameliorative powers of whimsy, the Irish might still be featured
item on the English menu.)
When Priest isn't indulging a weakness for attitudinizing-for
preaching to the choir of received opinion and approved sentiment-he's
capable of nuanced and controlled performances on the page.
"Christ is the Kind of Guy", for instance, is an adult
poem that affectingly dramatizes the complexities of our relationship
to Christ, the figure we can't help recrucifying no matter how
deliberate our attempts to rescue him.
Blue Pyramids may be a testament to the scope and scale of Priest's
output over the past thirty years (he's the author of fourteen books
and numerous recordings), but he's not well-served by this putative
selection', principally because it isn't selective enough. By my
count, slightly better than half of the poems in this book merit
the return trip they've been granted by ECW press. Too many slight
and too many baggy poems are on show with the result that genuinely
estimable works-of which there are literally scores-are all but
lost among trifles like "On Hearing that Ghandi tested his
Brahmacharya" or groaners like "Ode to the Bum". And
do we really need to revisit the lyrics to "Song instead of a
kiss", a hit for the lovely Alannah Myles but a poem only to
those who weigh a poem's merits by the relative insistence of its
rhyme ("It is to those who like to cling/ It is to those to
those I sing")? The book, moreover, arranges the poems
holus-bolus, without benefit of introduction or editorial paraphernalia
of any kind. As a result, there's no way to know from which works
individual poems were taken or even whether the poems have been
arranged in chronological order. And perhaps most lamentable of the
book's many editorial lapses is the fact that in this "New and
Selected Poems" one has no way of telling the new from the
old.
The result of this book's lack of editorial discrimination is that
Priest comes off, in toto, as consistently clever but only occasionally
compelling, a poet whose weakness for the wisecrack blunts the force
of the comic vision subtending the best of these poems. Less
inclusive, this book would have been far more complete.
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