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On Writing Poetry
(Waterstones Poetry Lecture)
Delivered at Hay On Wye, Wales,
June 1995.
Im supposed to be talking in a vaguely autobiographical way
about the connection between life and poetry, or at least between my life
and my poetry. I recently read an account of a study which intends to
show how writers of a certain age my age, roughly attempt
to seize control of the stories of their own lives by deviously
concocting their own biographies. However, its a feature of our
age that if you write a work of fiction, everyone assumes that the people
and events in it are disguised biography but if you write your
biography, its equally assumed youre lying your head off.
This last may be true, at any rate of poets: Plato said that poets should
be excluded from the ideal republic because they are such liars. I am
a poet, and I affirm that this is true. About no subject are poets tempted
to lie so much as about their own lives; I know one of them who has floated
at least five versions of his autobiography, none of them true. I of course
being also a novelist am a much more truthful person than
that. But since poets lie, how can you believe me?
Here then is the official version of my life as a poet:
I was once a snub-nosed blonde. My name was Betty. I had a perky personality
and was a cheerleader for the college football team. My favourite colour
was pink. Then I became a poet. My hair darkened overnight, my nose lengthened,
I gave up football for the cello, my real name disappeared and was replaced
by one that had a chance of being taken seriously by the literati, and
my clothes changed colour in the closet, all by themselves, from pink
to black. I stopped humming the songs from Oklahoma and began quoting
Kirkegaard. And not only that all of my high heeled shoes lost
their heels, and were magically transformed into sandals. Needless to
say, my many boyfriends took one look at this and ran screaming from the
scene as if their toenails were on fire. New ones replaced them; they
all had beards.
Believe it or not, there is an element of truth in this story. Its
the bit about the name, which was not Betty but something equally non-poetic,
and with the same number of letters. Its also the bit about the
boyfriends. But meanwhile, here is the real truth:
I became a poet at the age of sixteen. I did not intend to do it. It was
not my fault.
Allow me to set the scene for you. The year was 1956. Elvis Presley had
just appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show, from the waist up. At school dances,
which were held in the gymnasium and smelled like armpits, the dance with
the most charisma was rocknroll. The approved shoes were saddle
shoes and white bucks, the evening gowns were strapless, if you could
manage it; they had crinolined skirts that made you look like half a cabbage
with a little radish head. Girls were forbidden to wear jeans to school,
except on football days, when they sat on the hill to watch, and it was
feared that the boys would be able to see up their dresses unless they
wore pants. TV dinners had just been invented.
None of this you might think, and rightly was conducive
to the production of poetry. If someone had told me a year previously
that I would suddenly turn into a poet, I would have giggled. Yet this
is what did happen.
I was in my fourth year of high school. The high school was in Toronto,
which in the year 1956 was still known as Toronto the Good because of
its puritanical liquor laws. It had a population of six hundred and fifty
thousand, five hundred and nine people at the time, and was a synonym
for bland propriety. The high school I attended was also a synonym for
bland propriety, and although it has produced a steady stream of chartered
accountants and one cabinet minister, no other poets have ever emerged
from it, before or since.
The day I became a poet was a sunny day of no particular ominousness.
I was walking across the football field, not because I was sports-minded
or had plans to smoke a cigarette behind the field house the only
other reason for going there but because this was my normal way
home from school. I was scuttling along in my usual furtive way, suspecting
no ill, when a large invisible thumb descended from the sky and pressed
down on the top of my head. A poem formed. It was quite a gloomy poem:
the poems of the young usually are. It was a gift, this poem a
gift from an anonymous donor, and, as such, both exciting and sisnister
at the same time.
I suspect this is the way all poets begin writing poetry, only they dont
want to admit it, so they make up more rational explanations. But this
is the true explanation, and I defy anyone to disprove it.
The poem that I composed on that eventful day, although entirely without
merit or even promise, did have some features. It rhymed and scanned,
because we had been taught rhyming and scansion at school. It resembled
the poetry of Lord Byron and Edgar Allan Poe, with a little Shelley and
Keats thrown in. The fact is that at the time I became a poet, I had read
very few poems written after the year 1900. I knew nothing of modernism
or free verse. These were not the only things I knew nothing of. I had
no idea, for instance, that I was about to step into a whole set of preconceptions
and social roles which had to do with what poets were like, how they should
behave, and what they ought to wear; moreover, I did not know that the
rules about these things were different if you were female. I did not
know that poetess was an insult, and that I myself would some
day be called one. I did not know that to be told I had transcended my
gender would be considered a compliment. I didnt know yet
that black was compulsory. All of that was in the future. When
I was sixteen, it was simple. Poetry existed; therefore it could be written;
and nobody had told me yet the many, many reasons why it
could not be written by me.
At first glance, there was little in my background to account for the
descent of the large thumb of poetry onto the top of my head. But let
me try to account for my own poetic genesis.
I was born on November 18, 1939, in the Ottawa General Hospital, two and
a half months after the beginning of the Second World War. Being born
at the beginning of the war gave me a substratum of anxiety and dread
to draw on, which is very useful to a poet. It also meant that I was malnourished.
This is why I am short. If it hadnt been for food rationing, I would
have been six feet tall.
I saw my first balloon in 1946, one that had been saved from before the
war. It was inflated for me as a treat when I had the mumps on my sixth
birthday, and it broke immediately. This was a major influence on my later
work.
As for my birth month, a detail of much interest to poets, obsessed as
they are with symbolic systems of all kinds: I was not pleased, during
my childhood, to have been born in November, as there wasnt much
inspiration for birthday party motifs. February children got hearts, May
ones flowers, but what was there for me? A cake surrounded by withered
leaves? November was a drab, dark and wet month, lacking even snow; its
only noteworthy festival was Remembrance Day. But in adult life I discovered
that November was, astrologically speaking, the month of sex, death and
regeneration, and that November First was the Day of the Dead. It still
wouldnt have been much good for birthday parties, but it was just
fine for poetry, which tends to revolve a good deal around sex and death,
with regeneration optional.
Six months after I was born, I was taken by packsack to a remote cabin
in north-western Quebec, where my father was doing research as a forest
entomologist. I should add here that my parents were unusual for their
time. Both of them liked being as far away from civilization as possible,
my mother because she hated housework and tea parties, my father because
he liked chopping wood. They also werent much interested in what
the sociologists would call rigid sex-role stereotyping. This was a help
to me in later life, and helped me to get a job at summer camp teaching
small boys to start fires.
My childhood was divided between the forest, in the warmer parts of the
year, and various cities, in the colder parts. I was thus able to develop
the rudiments of the double personality so necessary for a poet. I also
had lots of time for meditation. In the bush there were no theatres, movies,
parades, or very functional radios; there were also not many other people.
The result was that I learned to read early I was lucky enough
to have a mother who read out loud, but she couldnt be doing it
all the time and you had to amuse yourself with something or other when
it rained. I became a reading addict, and have remained so ever since.
Youll ruin your eyes, I was told when caught at my secret
vice under the covers with a flashlight. I did so, and would do it again.
Like cigarette addicts who will smoke mattress stuffing if all else fails,
I will read anything. As a child I read a good many things I shouldnt
have, but this also is useful for poetry.
As the critic Norththrop Frye has said, we learn poetry through the seat
of our pants, by being bounced up and down to nursery rhymes as children.
Poetry is essentially oral, and is close to song; rhythm precedes meaning.
My first experiences with poetry were Mother Goose, which contains some
of the most surrealistic poems in the English language, and whatever singing
commercials could be picked up on the radio, such as:
Youll wonder where the yellow went
When you brush your teeth with Pepsodent!
I created my first book of poetry at the age of five. To begin with, I
made the book itself, cutting the pages out of scribbler paper and sewing
them together in what I did not know was the traditional signature fashion.
Then I copied into the book all the poems I could remember, and when there
were some blank pages left at the end, I added a few of my own to complete
it. This book was an entirely satisfying art object for me; so satisfying
that I felt I had nothing more to say in that direction, and gave up writing
poetry altogether for another eleven years.
My English teacher from 1955, run to ground by some documentary crew trying
to explain my life, said that in her class I had showed no particular
promise. This was true. Until the descent of the giant thumb, I showed
no particular promise. I also showed no particular promise for some time
afterwards, but I did not know this. A lot of being a poet consists of
willed ignorance. If you woke up from your trance and realized the nature
of the life-threatening and dignity-destroying precipice you were walking
along, you would switch into actuarial sciences immediately.
If I had not been ignorant in this particular
way, I would not have announced to an assortment of my high school female
friends, in the cafeteria one brown-bag lunchtime, that I was going to
be a writer. I said writer, not poet; I did have
some common sense. But my announcement was certainly a conversation-stopper.
Sticks of celery were suspended in mid-crunch, peanut-butter sandwiches
paused halfway between table and mouth; nobody said a word. One of those
present reminded me of this incident recently I had repressed it
and said she had been simply astounded. Why?, I said.
Because I wanted to be a writer? No, she said.
Because you had the guts to say it out loud.
But I was not conscious of having guts, or
even of needing them. We obsessed folks, in our youth, are oblivious to
the effects of our obsessions; only later do we develop enough cunning
to conceal them, or at least to avoid mentioning them at cocktail parties.
The one good thing to be said about announcing yourself as a writer in
the colonial Canadian fifties is that nobody told me I couldnt do
it because I was a girl. They simply found the entire proposition ridiculous.
Writers were dead and English, or else extremely elderly and American;
they were not sixteen years old and Canadian. It would have been worse
if Id been a boy, though. Never mind the fact that all the really
stirring poems Id read at that time had been about slaughter, mayhem,
sex and death poetry was thought of as existing in the pastel female
realm, along with embroidery and flower arranging. If Id been male
I would probably have had to roll around in the mud, in some boring skirmish
over whether or not I was a sissy.
Ill skip over the embarrassingly bad
poems I published in the high school year book had I no shame?
well, actually, no mentioning only briefly the word of encouragement
I received from my wonderful Grade 12 English teacher, Miss Bessie Billings
I cant understand a word of this, dear, so it must
be good. I will not go into the dismay of my parents, who worried
with good reason over how I would support myself. I will
pass over my flirtation with journalism as a way of making a living, an
idea I dropped when I discovered that in the fifties unlike now
female journalists always ended up writing the obituaries and the
ladies page.
But how was I to make a living? There was
not a roaring market in poetry, there, then. I thought of running away
and being a waitress, which I later tried, but got very tired and thin;
theres nothing like clearing away other peoples mushed-up
dinners to make you lose your appetite. Finally I went into English Literature
at university, having decided in a cynical manner that I could always
teach to support my writing habit. Once I got past the Anglo Saxon it
was fun, although I did suffer a simulated cardiac arrest the first time
I encountered T.S. Eliot and realized that not all poems rhymed, any more.
I dont understand a word of this, I thought, so
it must be good.
After a year or two of keeping my head down
and trying to pass myself off as a normal person, I made contact with
the five other people at my university who were interested in writing;
and through them, and some of my teachers, I discovered that there was
a whole subterranean Wonderland of Canadian writing that was going on
just out of general earshot and sight. It was not large in 1960
you were doing well to sell 200 copies of a book of poems by a Canadian,
and a thousand novels was a best-seller; there were only five literary
magazines, which ran on the life blood of their editors; but it was very
integrated. Once in that is, once published in a magazine
it was as if youd been given a Masonic handshake or a key to the
underground railroad. All of a sudden you were part of a conspiracy.
People sometimes ask me about my influences;
these were, by and large, the Canadians poets of my own generation and
that just before mine. P.K. Page, Margaret Avison, Jay Macpherson, James
Reaney, Irving Layton, Leonard Cohen, Al Purdy, D.G. Jones, Eli Mandel,
John Newlove, Gwendolyn MacEwen, Michael Ondaatje, Pat Lane, George Bowering,
Milton Acorn, A.M. Klein, Alden Nowlan, Elizabeth Brewster, Anne Wilkinson
these are some of the poets whowere writing and publishing then,
whom I knew, and whose poetry I read. People writing about Canadian poetry
at that time spoke a lot about the necessity of creating a Canadian literature.
There was a good deal of excitement, and the feeling that you were in
on the ground floor, so to speak.
So poetry was a vital form, and it quickly
acquired a public dimension. Above ground the bourgeoisie reined supreme,
in their two-piece suits and ties and camel-hair coats and pearl earrings
(not all of this worn by the same sex); but at night the Bohemian world
came alive, in various nooks and crannies of Toronto, sporting black turtlenecks,
drinking coffee at little tables with red-checked tablecloths and candles
stuck in chianti bottles, in coffee houses, well in the
one coffee house in town listening to jazz and folk singing, reading
their poems out loud as if theyd never heard it was stupid, and
putting swear words into them. For a twenty-year-old this was intoxicating
stuff.
By this time I had my black wardrobe more
or less together, and had learned not to say, Well, hi there!
in sprightly tones. I was publishing in little magazines, and shortly
thereafter I started to write reviews for them too. I didnt know
what I was talking about, but I soon began to find out. Every year for
four years, I put together a collection of my poems and submitted it to
a publishing house; every year it was to my dismay then, to my
relief now rejected. Why was I so eager to be published right away?
Like all twenty-one-year-old poets, I thought I would be dead by thirty,
and Sylvia Plath had not set a helpful example. For a while there, you
were made to feel that, if a poet and female, you could not really be
serious about it unless youd made a least one suicide attempt. So
I felt I was running out of time.
My poems were still not very good, but by
now they showed how shall I put it? a sort of twisted and
febrile glimmer. In my graduating year, a group of them won the main poetry
prize at the University. Madness took hold of me, and with the aid of
a friend, and another friend's flatbed press, we printed them. A lot of
poets published their own work then; unlike novels, poetry was short,
and therefore cheap to do. We had to print each poem separately, and then
disassemble it, as there were not enough as for the whole book;
the cover was done with a lino-block. We printed 250 copies, and sold
them through bookstores, for 50 cents each. They now go in the rare book
trade for eighteen hundred dollars a pop. Wish Id kept some.
Three years or so later after two
years at graduate school at the dreaded Harvard University, two broken
engagements, a year of living in a tiny rooming-house room and working
at a market research company which was more fun than a barrel of drugged
monkeys and a tin of orange-flavoured rice pudding and after the
massive rejection of my first novel, and of several other poetry collections
as well and not to mention my first confusing trip to Europe, I
ended up in British Columbia, teaching grammar to Engineering students
at eight-thirty in the morning in a Quonset hut. It was all right, as
none of us were awake; I made them write imitations of Kafka, which I
thought might help them in their chosen profession.
In comparison with the few years I had just
gone through, this was sort of like going to heaven. I lived in an apartment
built on top of somebodys house, and had scant furniture; but not
only did I have a 180 degree view of Vancouver harbour, but I also had
all night to write in. I taught in the daytime, ate canned food, did not
wash my dishes until all of them were dirty the biologist in me
became very interested in the different varieties of moulds that could
be grown on leftover Kraft dinner and stayed up until four in the
morning. I completed, in that one year, my first officially-published
book of poems and my first published novel, which I wrote on blank exam
booklets, as well as a number of short stories and the beginnings of two
other novels, later completed. It was an astonishingly productive year
for me. I looked like the Night of the Living Dead. Art has its price.
This first book of poems was called The
Circle Game; I designed the cover myself, using stick-on dots
we were very cost-effective in those days and to everyones
surprise, especially mine, it won a prize called The Governor Generals
Award, which in Canada was the big one to win. Literary prizes are a crapshoot,
and I was lucky that year. I was back at Harvard by then, mopping up the
uncompleted work for my doctorate I never did finish it
and living with three roommates, whose names were Judy and Sue and Karen.
To collect the prize I had to attend a ceremony in Ottawa, at Government
House, which meant dressups and it was obvious to all of us, as
we went through the two items in my wardrobe, that I had nothing to wear.
Sue leant me the dress and earrings, Judy the shoes, and while I was away
they incinerated my clunky rubber-soled Hush Puppy shoes, having decided
that these did not go with my new, poetic image.
This was an act of treachery, but they were
right. I was now a recognised poet, and had a thing or two to live up
to. It took me a while to get the hair right, but I have finally settled
down with a sort of modified Celtic look, which is about the only thing
available to me short of baldness. I no longer feel Ill be dead
by thirty; now its sixty. I suppose these deadlines we set for ourselves
are really a way of saying we appreciate time, and want to use all of
it. Im still writing, Im still writing poetry, I still cant
explain why, and Im still running out of time.
Wordsworth was sort of right when he said,
Poets in their youth begin in gladness/ But thereof comes in the
end despondency and madness. Except that sometimes poets skip the
gladness and go straight to the despondency. Why is that? Part of it is
the conditions under which poets work giving all, receiving little
in return from an age that by and large ignores them and part of
it is cultural expectation The lunatic, the lover and the
poet, says Shakespeare, and notice which comes first. My own theory
is that poetry is composed with the melancholy side of the brain, and
that if you do nothing but, you may find yourself going slowly down a
long dark tunnel with no exit. I have avoided this by being ambidextrous:
I write novels too. But when I find myself writing poetry again, it always
has the surprise of that first unexpected and anonymous gift. |