To mark National Poetry Month, In other Words is being guest-edited by rob mclennan. Throughout April, rob will present the work of dozens of poets he thinks deserve readers' attention, as seen through the eyes of their fellow poets.
Today: Marcus McCann on Nicholas Lea
Nicholas Lea was born in Whitehorse, Yukon Territory. Everything is Movies, his first full-length collection of poems, was launched at the Ottawa International Writers Festival in 2007.
Marcus McCann: Ironic distance. For Nicholas Lea -- born a year or two before the first of the millennial generation -- irony is a dominating, sometimes paralyzing concern. Lea’s first book obsessively ruminates on the tendency of his peers to hide behind hipster poses. And like the very best poets, Lea echoes content in form, breaking up even the hint of an affirmation with questions, equivocations, and slant-rhymes of the truth. Taking the piss is a heady business, but Lea is playful rather than didactic, and he loads his work with gorgeously consonant lines (“somewhere / where dummies wonder, rummage / for rumoured streams”) and surprising humour.
Dummies wonder
To what do we owe this unfuturing,
this failing to pale our time?
Am I alone in this?—
The elliptical … cheering on
a dummy
dream careening into sleep’s
cabbage-role afghan. You’re
not-fallen (this-time)—just |
under-the-bubble-bath-looking-
up.
An unjust
stomach bloody with art: abstract
and squiggly, like the veins from run-off
on a muddy bank. And all this blood-
flow ferrying primal fear is nothing
like dusty sunlight through barn slats.
More like a traveling circus diverted.
So why fry the ironist in all her
care-full uncaring? Who’s unfeeling
when they yawn
over-dramatically at the cathedral?
And on the subject of death—
the horror of decomposing—the unthink-
able thought of being eaten by the world’s
chemistry. We’ll call it
Post-distance—invent
a new school in a wood somewhere
where dummies wonder, rummage
for rumoured streams, all parched
and far-fetched.
-- Nicholas Lea, from Everything is Movies (Chaudiere Books, 2007)
