Simon Armitage, The Shout: Selected Poems (Harcourt,
2005),
hbk, 107pp., $23.00.
Lavinia
Greenlaw, Minsk
(Harcourt, 2005), hbk, 71pp., $21.00.
These titles
introduce to US readers two of the best-selling English poets in their forties. In some
sense they are both exemplary figures, from a generation of British poets born in the
sixties who emerged fully-formed in the nineties with what already seemed like a period
style. Some background to this might help: Armitage and Greenlaw were two of the poets
chosen by the Poetry Book Society for their New Generation promotions push,
which was, as Andrew Motion writes, launched in 1994 with the kind of fanfare not
usually associated with poetry. It was well received: it gave poetry a public profile that
it had long been denied, and introduced all those represented to the wider audience that
they deserved. Several of the poets have since become some of the best-known names in the
country: Simon Armitage, Lavinia Greenlaw, Don Paterson.
Its certainly true that this was a success story in
marketing termsten years on, the existence of these two books and of the recent
Graywolf anthology New British Poetry, co-edited by Paterson, shows how the bandwagon is still rolling. But now the stakes are higher:
will they crack America? In general,
British cultural exports from the nineties failed at this pointOasis and Robbie
Williams always seemed unconvincing; even the latter pretending to hook up with Nicole
Kidman couldnt convince the US
to tell him apart from the funny one in Mork & Mindy. Now Armitage and Paterson
are publicly flirting with the celebrity Charles Simic, will the US buy their brand of Britpop?
The worry is they might not see what all the fuss is about.
Remind me again whats so great about these guys? The strange thing is, no one seems
too confident. Paul Farley, another nineties poet approaching middle-age (he missed out on
the NewGen boat but made it into the diminishing returns re-run of last year,
calledwait for it!the Next Generation, many of whom were older than the
previous bunch) has commented ruefully and honestly, My generation havent had criticism; theyve
had marketing. Which all sounds bleak. Somehow the marketing of these poets has
always seemed a bit like special pleadingswaddling some rather fragile types in
blurbish cotton wool to insulate them against the attacks of too-clever bullies and mean
sceptics.
And there
have been attacks. Less generously than Andrew Motion, Iain
Sinclair puts it like this:
A more recent (and sinister)
phenomenon, the New Generation poets, have arrived in our midst like pod
people. They are eternally not-quite-young and they feed on images of blight [
] They
were invented by marketing men, hyped into existence with seemingly fictitious occupations
and previous histories dreamt up by Poetry Society copywriters. The Guardian, that
game old dowager, ran a works-outing photo of the whole bunch squatting in the windows of
the Poetry Society, lapel badges in place, like a conference of sales reps ordered to have
a good time.
This comes from the introduction to the 1996 anthology Conductors of Chaos which
Sinclair edited and which gathered together thirty-six elective outsiders, as
the blurb says, representing various post-avant or neo-modernist
or experimental tendencies in British poetry. Some of Sinclairs
cattiness hits the mark and some doesnt: he does well to point up the air of
dowdiness and bathos and unenthusiasm which hangs over the whole enterprise; but sinister?
The idea of a sinister poetry seems rather exciting (I think of Roy Fishers line,
All my life Ive been left-handed); but surely the worst thing the
NewGens can be accused of is annexing a disproportionate chunk of the tiny oxygen of
poetry-publicity for what were at worst dully condescending identikit poems? And if
Sinclairs conductors were really the hot shamans and punks and mad
scientists and revolutionaries he claims, would there be any need for the hints of jealous
resentment in his caricature?
From this vantage and from across the Atlantic this sort of self-interest and squabbling should seem an inexplicably
trivial curiosity. Boys will be boys! But the same kind of promotions language seems to
linger in the books at hand. Simon Armitages The Shout has the
subtitle Selected Poems, and the dust-jacket flap says that it collects his
work from the past three decades. But this makes Armitage seem somewhat older than
he really isa curious move from the publicity people; his first book was published
in 1989, which is more like a decade and a half ago. And the selection is an intriguing
one. A UK-market Selected came out from Faber and Faber in 2001 with 200-odd pages
of work drawn pretty evenly from Armitages (then) eight previous books; The Shout,
in contrast, gives us only 107 pages drawn from ten titles, and eleven of its 51
poemsa fifth of the bookcome from 1992s Kid, which, as Simic says
in his foreword, has sold 60,000 copies, a figure any writer, poet, or novelist
would envy.
Although this makes The Shout pleasingly readable in a single sitting, it seems
like an unnecessarily and uncharacteristically parsimonious way to select from a poet
whose key-notes are garrulousness and range, a sort of improvisatory bagginess. Again in
that description of Kid we see the blurring of criticism and marketing: Simic
presents Armitages work to US readers with the authority of its previous commercial
success; you will like it, its popular. Apart from quoting the poems to good effect,
Simics foreword otherwise seems surprisingly asinine; much of it reads as if
hes paid one of his students to cut-and-paste it together from the gleanings of a
Google-search: It is no wonder that he is one of the most popular poets in
England
All together he has published eleven collections of poetry. One more
complaint: whoever wrote Simics introduction and whoever set up the poems was a
terrible proof-reader: all together above should surely be
altogether, theres a be for a he on page 2, and
hired private nurse on page 6 should read hired a private nurse; I
could go on.
One of the things that makes this mid-career Selected an interesting volume is the
fact that the more recent work in it represents both some of the most and the least
successful poems in the book. Birthday comes from Armitages last
full-length collection, 2003s The Universal Home-Doctor. Its opening moves
recall the flashy metaphor-driven style of so-called Martian poetry of the
early 80s, the hyper-banal defamiliarized by being seen through outer-space wide eyes, as
in this aubade: The first bus, empty, carries its cargo of light / from the depot,
like a block of ice
One day older the planet weeps
But as it continues the poem surpasses any such
forebears with the bleak accuracy of its hurt:
This is the room
where I found you one night,
bent double, poring over
the Universal Home Doctor,
that bible of death, atlas
of ill-health:
hand-drawn, colour-coded diagrams of pain,
chromosomal
abnormalities explained,
progesterone secretion,
cervical
incompetence
Susan, for Gods sake.
I had to edge towards it,
close the cover with my bare foot.
The bravery in
writing this barely, approaching what cant be said, is genuine, and there
arent many contemporary poems which do it as well as this (although one which does
it better would be Kate Clanchys Miscarriage, Midwinter, from Newborn).
It may be that Armitages experience as a writer of fiction has informed this new
deftness with the painfully domestic. But
elsewhere in the newer poems here, lad-lit can only be a baleful influence, as
in Youre Beautiful. If I ask
what exactly the reader is supposed to do with this poem, Im not (or not only)
asking a rhetorical question; Id really like to know how anybody could find much
pleasure in this dire, charmlessly enunciated catalogue of poisonous clichés about gender
difference:
Youre beautiful
because you cant work the remote control.
Im ugly because of satellite television and twenty-four-hour rolling news.
[
]
Youre beautiful because you look great in any colour including red.
[
]
Im ugly for saying love at first sight is another form of mistaken
identity,
and that the most human of all responses is to gloat.
Im not sure
whats worse: the fact that this goes on for four whole pages, or that it has this
refrain: Ugly like he is, / Beautiful like hers, / Beautiful like
Venus, / Ugly like his, / Beautiful like she is, / Ugly like Mars. Yes, men are from Mars and women are from
you-know-where; now we have a poem adding its vatic imprimatur to the offensive certitudes
of such self-help talktalk that doesnt so much help, I suspect, as coarsen and
reduce the detail of the world, the texture of peoples actual lives. Perhaps
Im misunderstanding the poemits import must be comic, although it isnt
very funny; but the main thing I dont understand is why it exists.
Another poem from The Universal Home-Doctor opens the book and gives it its title.
The Shout tells the story of the speaker and a boy / whose name and face
/ I dont remember conducting a school experiment:
We were testing the
range
of the human voice:
he had to shout for all he was worth,
I had to raise an arm
from across the divide to signal back
that the sound had carried.
The boy gets
progressively further away, but the speaker addresses him in the last line: you can
stop shouting now, I can still hear you. This
sort of thing is rapidly becomingly a disastrous sub-genre, the poem which recalls some
school-days experience and tacks on a baggage of clunkingly found
significance. Seamus Heaney is probably to
blame: every spring / I would fill jampotfuls of the jellied / Specks to range on
window-sills at home, / On shelves at school
; I sat all morning in the
college sick-bay
, and so on. But in
the hands of Englishmen born in the sixties all of Heaneys blarneying charm is lost:
we end up with a crew of misty-eyed deluders nursing their playground non-stories over a
pint of Nostalgia Ale; the NewGens rechristianed the We Love 1972 Club. Remember how we used to play Dead Fish? / If
it rained, the dinner-ladies kept us in / and we cleared the canteen
A
Field Guide to the Birds of Britain & Europe / was the first book I owned, not
counting annuals
These are
beginnings of two poems from The Ice Age by Paul Farley, raising the unhappy
possibility that poetry is what results from that point in the evening when middle-aged
men realise they dont actually have anything to say to each other.
Anyway, the twist in Armitages poem comes just before the end: the boy,
it turns out, left town, went on to be twenty years dead / with a gunshot hole / in
the roof of his mouth, in Western Australia. But
not to worry: the speaker can still hear him. And
presumably the poem testifies to that persistence of memory; makes the voice enduring;
establishes a connexion through time and distance, and a connexion that overcomes death. Which are all the things that a poem should do, of
course. But the first problem is that the
boys suicide doesnt really work within the fiction of the poem: if the speaker
cant remember the boys name or what he looked like, how did he find out this
information and match it up with the same boy? Or
should we take it as a fanciful imagining of the boys fate? But its not really either fanciful or fitting
enough. Perhaps the poem then becomes a kind
of nineteenth-century dramatic monologue with a drastically unselfknowing speaker
conjuring up this pubescent version of the macabre to endorse the continuity of his own
solipsistic identity, unchanging through time. But
there isnt enough character for that; the I is relatively
undifferentiated; and the boys-own sensationalism of that faux-deadpan gunshot hole
/ in the roof of his mouth is of a piece with the tone of some of the earlier poems.
One of the signatures of Armitages earlier work was content like the story in
Gooseberry Season, about an unannounced and unexplained visitor arriving at a
familys home, and outstaying his welcome; they decide to murder himwe
ran him a bath / and held him underthen dispose of the body: we dragged
him like a mattress / across the meadow. A
poem called Hitcher gives us a speaker who picks up a hitchhiker and decides
to murder him: I let him have it on the top road out of Harrogateonce / with the head, then six times with the krooklok / in the
face. Elsewhere we get cruelty to animals: dogs hurled like bags of sand from
rented cars in one poem, and this in another: the dog shat, / and for that the
dog was taken out and shot. Some of these
poems are better than others, their moral blankness full of ambiguous menace; but
sometimes the performance seems more than a little factitious in its stageyness:
Anyone here had a go at
themselves
for a laugh? Anyone opened their wrists
with a blade in the bath? Those in the dark
at the back, listen hard. Those at the front
in the know, those of us who have, hands up,
lets show
that inch of lacerated skin
between the forearm and the fist. Lets
tell it
like it is
Surely this
isnt really telling it like it is at all? But
its not really entertaining enough as a fiction either. Presumably its this sort of thing which has
led critics to speak, as a quote on the back-cover does, of Armitages slangy,
youthful, up-to-the-minute jargon. But
when that minute was ten years ago, the dramatic performance implied in this
posturing is less convincingthe schlocky melodrama both of the verbal cliché
(let him have it
had a go at themselves / for a laugh
tell
it / like it is) and of the narrative content, add up to so many adolescent ripping
yarns. This performance of the radically inauthentic seems irrelevant to what, it becomes
clear, are Armitages actual and substantial gifts.
Simic does well to quote some of what he calls Armitages stunning
metaphors, as in the extended riffs of Not the Furniture Game:
His elbows were
boomerangs or pinking shears.
And his wrists were ankles
and his handshakes were puff adders in the bran tub
and his fingers were astronauts found dead in their spacesuits
and the palms of his hands were action paintings
[
]
And his dog was a sentry-box with no one in it
[
]
The whole system of his blood was Dutch elm disease.
Its that
whole system that pleases the most: the charm of its absolute conviction and
the precision within its nuttiness. I rather wish that Armitages poems would move
more in the direction of this anarchic image-based confounding of system; I
want more puff adders in the bran tub and less tell it / like it
is, I think. Not the Furniture
Game make an enlightening comparison with a poem which I suspect may have influenced
it, John Ashberys He, from Some Trees:
He indeed is the White
Cliffs of Dover.
[
]
He snorts in the vale of dim wolves.
[
]
He is never near. What you need
He cancels with the air of one making a salad.
[
]
He used to be pretty for a rat.
He is now over-proud of his Etruscan appearance.
Its a strange
thing that a moderately innovative poem from the 1950s can make a poem from the last
decadeand I think its a good poemlook like it might be playing it safe.
But the charm of Armitages lines survives the comparison, and there are a good
number of equally successful poems in the book. Is it legitimate to describe a poet in his
forties as promising? I want to suggest that it is. The Shout introduces
to US readers a writer of genuine talents who seems to have been able to write badly and
also rather well, sometimes in the course of a single poem.
Lavinia Greenlaws Minsk is also the writers first US publication, but Greenlaw is a rather different
fish from Armitage, even if the packaging of these two books makes English poetry look
something like a team effort, an in-house affair. Ruth Padel is quoted on both of them
(viz., Armitage has brilliance, Greenlaw is brilliant), and
Greenlaw also gets blurbs from Andrew Motion and NewGen poet Glyn Maxwell. And, like Armitage, she has a celebrity sponsor,
like a Victorian debutante carrying a letter of introduction to the best houses across the
Atlantic. Edward Hirsch writes a
foreword somewhat more perspicacious than Simics, but he still seems to repeat the
received ideas and stock marketing-lines about the poet that have been current since she
first emerged.
The main one is that Greenlaw is a poet with subjects and metaphors drawn from
sciencebut one wishes people would have stopped saying this by now, for it
seems more and more like a misnomer. The title
of Greenlaws poem Science for Poets is indicativethe implication
in Hirschs claim re-enforces a hapless two cultures intellectual model
defunct decades ago, like C.P. Snow and Leavis replaying the whole affair on
tranquillizers. Martin Amis did well to send up the position of most writers: I
dont know much about science, but I know what I like. The idea that
Greenlaws snippets of science for poets are a remarkable feature of her
writing does an injustice to her poems, finally; science seems more like an
occasional source of perceptual vocabulary and metaphors of process, usually mythologised,
than a model for some exemplary and mysterious precision. And what writer
doesnt try to be precise? The chimera
science doesnt come into it.
The other received idea about Greenlaw is this: she is a winter writer and her
landscapes are icy ones, as Hirsch says. Well, this one seems true; but its
born out almost to the point of self-parody: put simply, the words air,
glass, and/or ice feature in almost every poem in Minsk. The locus classicus, as it were, is
The Falling City, quoted here in full:
I was eight, I was
atmosphere,
more than willing to take to the air.
The world was locked and clear.
For a moment the glass
forgave me,
curved like a hand that absolutely
loved me, let me down so gently.
Its an odd
poem: for a time the clumsiness of rhyming me, -ly, and
-ly annoyed me, but now it seems winning in the poems combination of
total self-consciousness and blank self-incomprehension, and effectively childish. The
image does seem haunting; partly because it re-appears, slightly modulated, in so many of
the other poems:
I am up in the air
again,
cumulo-cirrus, thin ice [
]
We fly over a river,
part frozen, part cracking up
at the end of a beautiful winter:
a three-month blinding heaven
This repetition makes
the book seem impressively through-composed rather than the standard rag-bag of the
slimvol; but it can also approach mannerism and preciousness, as in the sequence-title,
A Drink of Glass. Theres something sinkingly ubiquitous in the title,
which perhaps comes from its echo of Philip Larkins too-often-recalled glass
of water / Where any-angled light / Would congregate endlessly and his High
Windows with their sun-comprehending glass and deep blue
air. The problem is, water and glass and air only have so much mileage in them; it
is intriguing to read a poet obsessed with looking at them rather than through
them, but its not intriguing forever.
Against this, the poems in that sequence are actually quite good, partly because they
allow their language-surface to be disrupted and made strange by lots of
foreign matter, be it namesKaamosuntranslated
phrasessinenen hetkior this catalogue of absent features within
the diminished perceptual field:
no gentian, aconite or
anemone,
no slate, plum, oil-spill or gun,
no titanium or turquoise,
no mercury or magnesium,
no phosphorus, sapphire or silver foil,
no duck egg or milk jug
One the things
thats pleasing about this is the suggestion of some eccentric taxonomy considered
linguisticallythings paired alphabetically, or because they almost rhyme. Elsewhere
in the book theres a similar sense of information being re-ordered in new ways: the
first section of the book is taken up with poems that build up a piecemeal narrative of
childhoodthe speaker plays games with her brother, takes piano lessons, grows into a
backwater teenager, stays out late drinking, takes karate lessons, and so on.
But at the same time theres a level on which these stories fashion identity in a
magical, superstitious, elliptical way, even at the risk of sounding ridiculous: I
was wire. / I drank the blue air.
The sequence A Strange Barn presents an amusingly flattened version of
cultural history, as the expansion and building of London Zoo is set in
context barely taken out of reference books: so this is from Flit: The
Aviary, 1962: The air hums with promise, / missiles for Cuba, a contract for
Concorde, / The Birds and Blowin In The Wind, and this from
Stomp: The Elephant Pavilion, 1965:
The idea is a herd in a
scrum
trumpeting out of fear or just for fun.
The Americans bombed North Vietnam.
Flower Power, mini
skirts
Its a fine
line, but Greenlaw plies her critical withdrawal with enough wit that the poem stands up
in the face of these worn-out properties. Minsk contains a number of other poems
which seem extremely accomplishedin particular Against Rhetoric: A Letter to
Lord Chandos, 1603, which answers Hofmannsthals fictional description of
losing faith in language with a triumphant and well-argued wonder. Like the
best poems in Armitages The Shout, it suggests a way in which poets of the
New Generation might arrive at an achievement more complicated and individual
than the rubrics of that promotional effort allowed. Et toute la reste, as Joyce
once wrote in a letter,
est publicité.
Matthew Sperling
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