We feature each week Nicholas Reid's reviews and comments on new and recent books.
“BEING HERE:
Selected Poems” by Vincent O’Sullivan (Victoria University Press, $NZ40)
There is a
foolish and, I now realize, pointless game I used to play when reviewing any
new collection of poetry.
I attempted to
guess why the poems had been arranged in the order in which they were arranged;
and why they had been divided into different sections. Sometimes this game led
me to fashion all manner of elaborate theories about the thematic connections
between the poems in Section A as opposed to the poems in Section B of the same
volume. I’m afraid I attempted this in the brief notice I wrote of Vincent
O’Sullivan’s capacious 2011 collection The
Movie May Be Slightly Different when I reviewed it for the NZ Listener (23 July 2011) and I played
the silly game again when I reviewed on this blog [look it up on the index at right] O’Sullivan’s prize-winning 2013
collection Us, then.
But I have given
up playing this game. A wise poet told me that the only reason he divided a
collection into sections was to give readers a break. Readers might be happy to
read 15 poems one after the other, but they could be daunted by the prospect of
reading 35 poems one after the other. Therefore, said the poet, dividing a new
collection into sections was for him simply a way of signalling to readers that
it was okay for them to take a break in their reading.
So I have
abandoned the game. I now tend to approach new collections of poetry as collections of individual poems, each to
be considered on its own merits.
But the rules
are rather different, are they not, when it comes to a volume surveying a
poet’s whole career so far? Surely it’s legitimate for a reader to look at the
development or persistence of the poet’s ideas, or at the changes in the poet’s
style, when the volume presents the poems in chronological order?
Let’s situate
this argument.
Being Here: Selected Poems
gives us, in order of publication, selections from over forty years of Vincent
O’Sullivan’s output. It covers 15 collections, beginning with Bearings (1973) and ending with Us, then (2013), with eight new poems
appended at the end. En route an earlier Selected
Poems (1992) is sampled. Being Here:
Selected Poems is a handsome hardback in which the 230 pages of poems are
followed by an alphabetical index of titles of poems.
There is no
introduction and no apologia by the poet. I have to assume (and why not?) that
these are the poems Vincent O’Sullivan has chosen to represent what he, at the
present time, considers the best and most vital of his work so far.
Again, I have to
assume that O’Sullivan has had to be severely self-critical to make such a
selection, because it represents only a small part of all the poetry he has had
published. His first two collections of poems (from the 1960s) don’t figure.
The 120 poems of The Movie May Be
Slightly Different (admittedly a bigger-than-average collection) are
represented by16 poems in Being Here.
The 78 poems of Us, then are
represented by 23 poems. So I could rattle on, comparing the contents pages of
earlier volumes with the contents pages of this one. All “selected” poems are
provisional, especially when the poet is still writing. It does mean, however,
that the reader might sometimes regret what isn’t here. I’m sorry not to sight
“The incentives, south”, which I still think one of the best of Us, then. And (blowed if I rationally
know why), I missed the cheery “Anglicans, good oh!” from The Movie May Be Slightly Different. Other readers might have
different omissions to mourn.
Reading Being Here from cover to cover over the
course of a couple of weeks, I met many familiar acquaintances and
re-considered some earlier judgments I had made on them. In Butcher and Co. (1977) and The Butcher Papers (1982), the figure of
Butcher has always puzzled me. Is this meat-chopper-wielding guy a satirical
swipe at the materialistic Kiwi joker, who has no time for Culture, God and
Higher Things? Is he the man for whom the beauty of catching a fish ends merely
in dead meat? (As is implied in the poem “Fish for All That Rise as Rise Wet
Stars”). Or is he an affirmation that inside even such a joker as he, there is still
room for poetry, myth and legend? (The poem “Do You Ever Consider” would
suggest so). As I now read what is representative of the Butcher poems in Being Here, there is a fruitful
ambiguity to the character, in which respect he is as distant cousin to the
similarly mythologised “Mr Maui” of Peter Bland.
O’Sullivan’s preoccupations
have changed over the years, but there are some constants in what is
represented in Being Here. One of his
greatest skills is his ability to express complex philosophical and theological
ideas without condescension and without too much abstraction. His language
often sounds deceptively colloquial. He does not show off his learning. But the
ideas ambush us anyway. There are those instantaneous connections between
things, which prove to be the heart of the poem. “Kingfisher: Winter”, from the
first represented collection Bearings
(1973), flips from a literal wintry scene to archetypes of Greek mythology. In
“Holy Thursday – 2” (from For the Indian
Funeral, 1976) a bite into a sweet potato (kumara) suddenly flips the poem
from Mexico to New Zealand. Similarly, and especially in the earlier poems
represented, the metaphysical butts into everyday reality. Death, with his
horse and scythe, lurks in doorway in “For a Third Birthday” from Butcher & Co. (1977). More
pointedly, “Don’t Knock the Rawleigh’s Man” (from The Rose Ballroom, 1982) seems set to be piece of Kiwiana
nostalgia. (It appealed as such to my wife and me as we read it out, and had to
explain to our teenaged daughters what a Rawleigh’s man was.) It transmutes
into a reflection on the temptation of Christ; and the congeries of flashy
things that detract from the deep heart’s core.
Another of
O’Sullivan’s special skills is his pithy way with titles. His titles are an
intrinsic part of most of his poems. A certain book editor once remarked to me that
O’Sullivan’s titles are often better than some people’s poems. True. Prime
example? “Nice Morning for it, Adam” (from the 2004 collection of the same
name). If the reader were a little inattentive, he/she might at first take this
poem to be simply about a gardener and flowers. Add the title and we have Eden
and God with shears clipping us.
None of this
means that the O’Sullivan’s poems are all conundra waiting to puzzle us. The
straight colloquial satire is here, in the likes of “Resthaven” (from Butcher & Co.), a devastating reportage
on old people trapped in a nursing home like prisoners. And quotidian reality – what we literally see, hear, smell, taste
and touch – is a constant preoccupation. In the selection from The Pilate Tapes (1986) there are just a
few of the poems referencing Pilate and the Crucifixion. (I note O’Sullivan
does not include the most explicit Crucifixion and Resurrection ones, “fault /
line” and “TELEX FOR JIX RE SUNDAY”, which he chose among the poems that
represented him when he edited the Oxford
Anthology of Twentieth Century New Zealand Poetry.) More space is given to
the sequence “The Westmere Replays” which tells us of a man trying
unsuccessfully to chat up women (“Corner”); a woman dying (“Visitor”); women
remembering American soldiers in New Zealand in the Second World War (“Was
She?”) and the experience of meeting an old flame after a long separation
(“Late Romantic”, which opens with that fine anti-romantic line “The moon mightn’t be so fat if it wasn’t for
what we fed it.”)
Quotidian
reality is not, however, as straightforward as it at first seems, and this
brings me to another O’Sullivan preoccupation which I can only call “the
thingness of things”.
Often, in his
poems of the last twenty years, there is a resistance to overloading things
with “meaning”, an attempt to see things as they are without philosophising and
without imposing upon them a human perspective. I was getting a little lost in the
poems selected from the collection Seeing
You Asked (1998), whose allusions were, to me, somewhat opaque and whose
philosophical speculations strained; when “Right on”, the first poem selected
from Lucky Table (2001), slapped me
alert with its opening lines “A dead
overturned beetle can look as if / it’s feeling in several fob-pockets at
once, / checking the beetle version of
time / when the ticking stopped on cue. / A dead beetle looks as though /
there’s nothing left to do, supposing / it stayed alive. Dead and complete”.
Sure, there is the hint of anthropomorphism here (feeling in fob-pockets), but
this is a brilliant reflection on the humanness of being human and the
animalness of being animal. The beetle and its death are different from, and
other than, the human. A similar idea is seen in the reflections on an elephant
in “The monastic life” (from Nice morning
for it, Adam, 2004)
From Seeing You Asked, the poem “As is, is”
wishes for a world in which it were possible to meet reality face to face, with
the line “Come down, each atom invites,
come down to where things actually are”. But given the nature of human
perception, given the human propensity for abstraction, and given language’s
nets of metaphor and approximation, this is not possible.
In “River road,
due south” (from Nice morning for it,
Adam) we seem to be getting a picture of literal “reality” until we re-read
the opening line and realize we are in an extended metaphor.
“Being here”
(from Further Convictions Pending,
2009) wishes for direct experience of bees, apricots, the beauty of the day – the
thingness of things. But metaphor and abstraction creep in. In other words, in
high-falutin Kantian terms (of which O’Sullivan would never be guilty in his
poetry), we can know only the phenomena,
never the noumena. The noumena are the Eden that is never
attainable. The screen of our humanity comes between us and nature. That
O’Sullivan chooses “Being Here” as the title of this collection shows how
central these concerns are to him.
Which, as I now
realize, is a very lame way to sum up the man’s work. What of those poems about
childhood? What of the ones that comment on high art – literature and
especially paintings? What of the familial ones? To do justice to them all, I
would have to write a notice much longer than this.
Time for the
purely personal response.
First, I have to
mention three poems that have stayed with me since I closed Being Here.
* “Poem 13” from
the chilly, wintry collection Brother
Jonathan, Brother Kafka (1980) because of its severe and admonitory
opening: “To be in a place for spring and
not have lived its winter / is to get things on the cheap – it is asking from
sky / as much as taking from earth, what has not been earned, / it is food
without its growing, pay without labour.”
* “Saving the Image” from The Rose Ballroom (1982) is as perfect a poem about the persistence
and wayward ways of memory, and the potential falsity of artificially-preserved
images, as New Zealand has produced.
* The brilliant
“No harm in hoping” from Lucky Table
(2001), which I here quote cheekily in its entirety:
“At the end of the story I want you
to say, ‘I’ve forgotten the plot entirely.
It’s no use asking which character was which,
What name she used, what his job was.
Or where the bridge crossed the canal.’
At the end of the story I want you
to remember only the important things
that walk between the congregations of print
like a bride you’ve read of between the torches
of the story you thought you read.”
Second, a
summary of this whole review.
It’s pretty
obvious, isn’t it? This is essential reading.
looking forward to reading this book
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