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We feature each week Nicholas Reid's reviews and comments on new and recent books.
We feature each week Nicholas Reid's reviews and comments on new and recent books.
“IN A SLANT LIGHT – A Poet’s Memoir” by
Cilla McQueen (Otago University Press, $NZ35)
Recently a poet,
who had written at some length about her early life with her parents, mildly
rebuked me for drawing what she thought were wrong inferences about her
relationship with her mother. Duly chastened, I replied that I was only going
on what her long poem had itself said or implied. If a poet chooses to be
confessional about very personal matters, it is very hard for readers not to
draw conclusions about the poet, the poet’s friends and family and the poet’s
life in general. This is the danger (or, if you prefer, the courage) of
confessional poetry. Write about yourself in such detail, and risk having the
world chattering about you rather than about your work.
I am saying all
this at the top of this notice, because what was true of that other poet is
doubly true of Cilla McQueen’s In a Slant
Light. Let me say at once, before I pass any other judgments, that I found In a Slant Light accessible, thoroughly
enjoyable, and revealing a strong and sane personality. But it is highly
confessional, so you will certainly end up having some opinions on Cilla
McQueen and friends.
This handsomely
produced hardback (with ribbon bookmark) is exactly what its subtitle says – a
poet’s memoir. Divided into what amount to chapters, its free verse
takes us from 1949, when Priscilla McQueen was born (to an English mother and
an Aussie father) in a hospital in Birmingham in England; to 1984, when she was
trying to free herself from other influences and striking out on her own as a
poet.
In between is
all her childhood, remembered vividly – some time in Australia; travelling to
New Zealand in a Sunderland Flying Boat; her family settling in Dunedin;
childhood naughtinesses; getting addicted to reading at an early age; a couple
of return journeys (by ship, of course) to England with her mum and siblings,
to live with relatives; and girlhood dreams of being a ballerina, compromised
by a back injury and a dodgy spine thereafter. McQueen’s family appear to have
been supportive in the young girl’s and teenager’s crises, even when she was
going wild and slightly rebellious. Maybe it helped that she liked high school,
was a bit of a whiz in the humanities subjects, and ended up as college dux.
But ‘varsity
years were rather more fraught at first. Losing her virginity at about 17 (I
assume that’s what “surrender at dawn”
on p.57 means) resulted in a pregnancy and what she calls a “shotgun wedding” and a youthful marriage.
This didn’t last but it did produce the daughter of whom she is very proud.
Then there was her fascination with drama, in Dunedin centring on Patric and
Rosalie Carey’s Globe theatre and involving a large cast of bohemian thespians.
McQueen records with relish her undergraduate enthusiasms, but she is not so
self-regarding as not to notice how privileged her life was in some respects in
those days. As she remarks self-deprecatingly, she lived “in a happy, ignorant, opinionated / undergraduate bubble.” (p.66) Nor
is she naively impressed with all of the arts-and-culture crowd, for as she
later remarks: “Sometimes it seems to me
the art world contains / but few true thinkers
/ and many hangers-on.” (p.127) There were the pains and struggles
of balancing being a single mum with studying and having to earn a living. And
there were the protest causes she became involved in - especially the conservation one of opposing
the building of an aluminium smelter at the Bluff. And there was her ache to
produce something distinctive of her own. The literary and acting world of
Dunedin was a great solace, but a real turning point was meeting (and
eventually marrying) the artist Ralph Hotere, in whose work she became
absorbed. In fact, she implies, she may have become too absorbed in it, as
it took her some time to find her voice as the prolific poet she has been since
those days. In a Slant Light fades
out in 1984, when the poet is 35, still married to Hotere, and with her first
volumes published. While In a Slant Light
is mainly a memoir written from the perspective of old age, McQueen
interpolates the texts of six or seven poems written nearer the times her
memoir records.
All of the above
simply gives you the “bibliographical” view of the book by telling you what it
contains. It does not really tell you how In
a Slant Light achieves its effects or what notes and themes it strikes.
As a personal
response, I admit that I was often absorbed – especially in the book’s earlier
sections – with what I would call the purely nostalgic aspect. Cilla McQueen
and I are of the same generation – both baby-boomers – she being a few years
older than me. Therefore I often nodded my head at specific indicators of the
times (the 1950s and early 1960s), which I recognised from my own childhood. I
mean things such as the names of radio serials, and the type of foods consumed
and playground games (stacks-on-the-mill etc.) and shop-visits like this:
“Bronze penny fills my hand,
silver threepence as thin as a moon.
Farthings are remembered by the shopkeeper….
I come in the widening space, approach
the glass counter, the sweets in bottles and trays
all shapes and colours, pink cachous, sherbet,
licorice, acid drops, pineapple chunks,
aniseed balls, a paper twist for a halfpenny.” (p.17)
Like McQueen,
when I was a kid I travelled with my family, by ship, to England and back. I
remember, as she does, such things as the King Neptune ceremony for kids as we
crossed the equator, and the strange like-but-unlike-home sensation that
England produced. Like McQueen, I also remember my first shocked childhood
reaction to the following public event:
“One morning in the kitchen
making toast for breakfast
we hear on the Bell radio which sits
on the shelf beside the yellow venetian blind
above the sink, a news flash:
the assassination of President Kennedy.
There’s anguish in the reporter’s voice.” (p.47)
As an
Aucklander, I can even key into some of the experiences McQueen had in Dunedin
as a student. Like her – dammit, like all arty students at the time – I had the
iconic meeting with James K.Baxter, though in my case it was in the last year
of Baxter’s life, in a student cellar, and I was miffed when he refused to
answer my earnest student question about how he set about writing his poems.
(McQueen records him telling her young self not to bother reading the poetry of
Allen Curnow. Interesting.) Retrospectively, and when I consider the student
loans in which my own children have to be entangled, I can also endorse her
student memory:
“Nobody pays university fees.
We are given a fantastic education
by Aotearoa New Zealand.
We develop an independent manner of speaking.” (p.60)
Like her, I have
had some career as a high-school teacher, and like her I remember from the
1970s:
“Chalk-skreeek paroxysms….chalk dust….
carbon paper, cranky copiers, Banda, Gestetner,
inky machinery, paper, time divided by buzzers and
bells.” (pp.85-86)
But while such
nostalgic recognition is great fun, it isn’t what McQueen is essentially on
about.
She is fully
aware that memory itself is a faulty thing, although, paradoxically, she finds
that keeping diaries – as she used to do – is no help, because diaries too
often flatten experience into mere series of external events and miss the
inwardness of experience. Only the memory one still has can turn the past into
poetry. As she remarks early in In a
Slant Light:
“Snaps, tableaux – can’t be sure about the
authenticity of memory,
but by my lights it’s all I have to go on.” (p.7)
Of course memory
is related to how we see things – both literally and metaphorically –
and a good part of this book refers to the sense of sight. McQueen did the
self-portrait on the book’s cover and it emphasises, most appropriately, the poet’s
eye-glasses. (Again, I share an experience with her – we both had the childhood
awkwardness of having defective sight diagnosed a little late). Vision is
related to the book’s title In a Slant
Light, and is referenced a couple of times in the text.
There is a
childhood memory:
“In
Brisbane
my fingertips
touch dancing motes
in a slant sunbeam.”
(p.8)
And there is an
adult reaction to a group of Ralph Hotere’s paintings:
“In the shadowy hallway hang three paintings
that seem completely black.
When the light slants in from the front door I
see that the matt canvas is textured with words in thicker paint, black on black….” (p.80)
The “slant”
light could be the light of sunset (the poet getting old…). But it could also
be suggesting that we all see things from a particular angle – just as the
light falls from a particular angle, which heightens and emphasises the
contours and flaws of things, as well as exposing significant reality.
This connects
with the essential subjectivity that is part of being a poet. More than
nostalgic recall, more than thoughts on memory and vision, In a Slant Light is Cilla McQueen’s account of becoming a poet. An
early childhood memory indicates this path. She is told off for reaching over
the fence and destroying part of a neighbour’s seedling nursery and she admits:
“I did lean over the fence, I did
plick all those little seedlings out
of their yielding soil one by one,
because I liked the sound.” (p.12)
This is the poet
in embryo.
Later there is
the proto-poet’s sheer fun in playing with words:
“Behind this curtain, on a table, is a
typewriter –
not supposed to be touched
but I can hardly tear myself away
for fascination with the letters
appearing on the blank sheet
representing language, meaning – mistakes –
the incongruity of this serious
machine
in my inexpert hands creating nonsense
as it casts up inky letters one by one.” (p.31)
The power of
language is underlined in McQueen’s time acting on stage, and in such things as
her account of Rosalie Carey, conducting drama classes with “agile enunciation… [which] renders the voice an instrument of music…”
(p.83)
There is the
realisation that sometimes poetry can be simply an escape from the quotidian:
“I write for company and to sort out my
emotions, dismayed at the turn my life has taken. With the help of my family and
my studies I contain
the shock; reading Villon,
hoist myself out of the difficult present through the
long-ago
consciousness of a poet.”
(p.77)
There is also,
and perhaps most painfully, the realisation that the poet can be distracted
from her own creative path by absorption in the art of somebody else, even if
that is somebody she loves:
“Layer
on layer of Ralph’s works
cloak me.
Were I to lift them gently away with tweezers
in all their dark seductive textures,
might I find myself in my spare time
doing what, apart from appreciating, facilitating?
Sewing, cooking, knitting, spinning, reading,
acting, visiting, making jam, bottling fruit, baking
bread…
My focus was on him – his work intrigued me –
I was fortunate to take part.” (pp.91-92)
This theme is
developed later, rather more assertively. Talent, life and experience make her
a poet, but so does choosing her own path and getting out of somebody else’s
shadow.
This is the
essence of In a Slant Light.
Of course much
that is very personal is aired here, such as the early stages of her
relationship with Ralph Hotere:
“He calls me wet behind the ears.
I feel like a licked-by-its-mother-tongue
wobbly-balancing-four-square newborn foal. I hope we might have a baby, but he
says quietly, it’s unlikely.” (p.82)
Hard, then, not
to feel sometimes that you’re eavesdropping on what isn’t really yours to know.
But then Cilla McQueen puts this aspect of a poet’s being very well in a
passage where she speaks of poets who affected her in student years:
“Dylan
Thomas and Gerard Manley Hopkins
speak to my inner ear with lyric and sprung lines,
linguistic energy like Shakespeare’s
and something else – their own dear selves as poets
who have sat down to write with pen and paper.” (p.55)
In the end, this
is what we get in In a Slant Light.
Communion with a poet who has sat down and written and consciously decided to
leave us with her own dear self.
I’ll probably
get hammered by the usual suspects for ending my notice on this upbeat note –
but I’ll leave it at that.
Querulous
footnote: In the 1964 section of her memoir, Cilla
McQueen speaks of being with her teenage boyfriend at the time and listening
to, and enjoying, the music of many jazz greats, including Wynton Marsalis. As
Wynton Marsalis was born in 1961, and would have been three years old at the
time McQueen recalls, this is hardly likely. Marsalis made his first recordings
in the 1980s. Truly memory is a fallible thing.
Joanne Wilkes gave me permission to post here the interesting comment she sent me:Dear Nick
ReplyDeleteI've not read the Cilla McQueen book, but it struck me that this Dickinson poem may be relevant to her title?
Tell all the truth but tell it slant — (1263)
Tell all the truth but tell it slant —
Success in Circuit lies
Too bright for our infirm Delight
The Truth's superb surprise
As Lightning to the Children eased
With explanation kind
The Truth must dazzle gradually
Or every man be blind —
Best wishes
Joanne Wilkes