Reviews
The Drowning of the Saints,
Reviews by Fred Johnston in Books Ireland April 2004
Paul Perry is a young Dubliner
who won a Hennessy in 1998, was a James Michener fellow
of creative writing at Miami University and a poetry
fellow at Houston, Texas, a scribe-in-residence in
Longford in 2002 and currently writer-in-residence
at the University of Ulster. No mean feat. Or, as
a famous Texas wit might put it, no degrandisification
poetical-wise for this Irishlander.
I can bring Bushifications into
this legitimate-wise because a jacket screed penned
by Fred D'Aguiar disturbingly describes these poems
as a 'coalition' presumably a willing one
'of imaginative flair and formal discipline'. Must
one prepare to be shocked and awed?
Shaking from an encounter with
D'Aguiarotype images, so clearly a product of the
world we live in, used to describe poetry, one opens
this book and falls in among pleasanter fruit. For
there is marvellous and welcome poetry here, a breath
of fresh air, one might say, in the occasionally shut-tight
and barred bunkhouses of Irish poetry. Poetry as Words
of Mass Instruction?
On first inspection, there is
ample evidence from the get-go of WMI and plans to
produce more. 'Blessed is the fruit' is the first
salvo, tidy verse-lets of three-lines each:
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...and I'm a ghost
dunking my head
into the cold
frivolous water
mouth open
like a dumb fish...
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'Frivolous water' is a marvellous
sound. The stanzas are haiku-intense, everything stripped
down, every word balanced. In 'The Red Dogs of Wicklow'
Perry uses two-line stanzas, longer in line, with
the same clustering effect:
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...that things are passing
from our lives. And so,
we walked on, with our own small hurts
to contend with, until
we turned from Terenure
to Templeogue...
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Dublin city and environs are
encircled by some of these poems, as are the images
provoked and invoked in them: Stillorgan, a Dublin
bus, the history of the city as explored through anecdote
or memory. It's as if the poet himself has to investigate
sightings of the past before pitching over the top
into new territory. 'Rhapsody with owl' is fast-paced,
sharp, poignant, and tragical:
...addiction like an angry
owl pledging
your faith to the body body of the listening
moon still the two of us are running away... |
I do pray that neither poet nor
publisher writes in to say that the repetition of
the word 'body' is an error! [BI's editor deleted
and now hastily restores it ] for this is poetry
of a modernist kind not often tackled in this country,
a chancy, racy poetry, breathless and emotive and
risky. More power to Perry here.
As this reviewer has noted often,
visual art holds a particular attraction for poets;
not surprisingly, Perry has a couple of poems whose
inspiration was a painter: Chagall, Breughel, Goya.
He likes jazz too, for that matter.
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I am a smear of lightning
over Barley harbour
briefly and writing to the sound
of rain is religion
my new blue singing religion
we took a walk
and grew too big for the town
we took a walk...
-- 'The Walk', after Chagall.
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Chagall painted this picture
between 1917 and 1918, and its central note is the
stable and feet-on-the-ground young man holding the
hand of a girl who appears to be flying, or floating
like a balloon, above him to the viewer's right: what
have we come to when it's available now as an e-card!
'The Straw Mannequin' is a poem 'after Goya', whose
nervous breakdown produced such horrific images:
they think it funny
what they're doing to me
they laugh
they think it hilarious... |
The Goya painting, which I'm
sure must be 'El Pelele', in which four women toss
a man-mannequin dressed in a fashionable French style
on a blanket, is disturbing for the boneless shape
of the figure in the air. It has interrogated the
imagination too of the poet Tripp Howell, in his 'To
the puppet in a Goya painting'. If you want synchronicity
into the bargain, the work of the contemporary artist
Grayson Perry no relation, I'm sure, but what
the hell has been compared authoritatively
with that of Goya! Paul Perry's poem is, however,
both disturbing and poignant; one feels sorry for
the puppet-man (I think the Goya image is ambiguous
in this respect, frankly, and plays with ambiguity
in the title) and through him for all men tossed about
as puppets. Now by dropping capital letters to start
stanzas or lines, Perry effectively alters the state
of the body of the poem and what it means; this is
a poem about personality on the edge of dissolving,
of paranoia.
On the other hand, Perry's denser,
longer poems are resonant with a kind of sad philosophy,
as if despair is a thing best discussed at length.
A poem such as the word-think 'To Dexter Above', dedicated
to the jazz great Dexter Gordon, rants brazenly and
wonderfully, word-jazz, Ferlinghetti-ing all over
the place:
white winged students waiting
for the shabby
saxophone to start its praying, chipped
and dented, bedraggled gold like the sun-
light hazy, weak and sweet on those early
morning in Paris, restless, unsleeping... |
Only a poem which talks like
jazz could do the great jazz man justice.
It is the bittersweet taste,
touch and word-feel of Perry's experimentation, his
desire, like the best of painters, to reach out further
than his contemporaries, that makes him both interesting
and, in this conservative Irish literary scene, his
own worst enemy. Irish society and Irish art, like
Irish Arts Councils, are conservative. Irish society
is a nation of born civil servants for whom, say,
a poem mysteriously and fragmentarily called 'from
the valley of dry bones' might just be too much altogether.
It bangs off with a run of prose, a barrage of words,
then dives into a minefield of single lines and doubles:
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And the discarded wings
of angels.
Tell me: there is nothing
you need to know.
There is nothing you need
to know.
A boat without oars jostles
on the water.
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Fragmentation, alienation, a
poem which reads like a script for solo performance
or, given it's 'stage-direction', sotto voce, perhaps
for two; Beckettesque, different, challenging. Come
on lads, some student theatre group, even some lunchtime
Peacock producer: I dare you to perform it, to try
something new, something not Synge, not Yeats, not
safe. I would love to hear a good actor, a good voice,
give this poem life.
Paul Perry's début collection
startled me, confused me, made me think, made me angry
and envious. His voice should be heard and anyone
who doesn't buy a copy of this book is missing out
on a real poetic find.
© Books Ireland, 2004.
The Drowning of the Saints,
Reviewed by David Arnold
The Crimson Feet Review, Nov. 2003, crimsonfeet.org
Paul Perry's first collection
of poetry, The Drowning of the Saints, is an
exciting one. It covers a vast area in terms of the
geographical distances from rural Ireland to urban
America, with other out of the way places thrown in
for measure, including the Swedish Gotland, and Mexican
Chetumal. These poems of travel, of arrival and departure
have a certain displaced feel about them. They chart
the thoughts of a wanderer, of a young man finding
his way in the world.
There are indeed many good Irish
poets writing now, and yet Perry is different to them
all. In his poems, he displays a desire to experiment
with form, something not common in Irish poetry. In
poems such as "from the valley of dry bones",
w ritten sotto voce, the poet tells us, there
seems to be an avoidance of narrative as if reflecting
the lack of a story of those who travelled from Berlin
to Dublin in 1945, "stars fall like rusted anchors
into the sea".
Perry has a musical ear, and
I don't just mean the poems he writes which allude
to music. One of the collection's finest is a poem
in memory to the late, great tenor saxophonist Dexter
Gordon. But there is a real care and attention to
the sound of the line which is to be admired, a sensual
adherence to the sonic quality of the word. In "Leap
Year Lake", the poet writes "leap year lake,
the joy in just saying it."
He is a thinking poet, yes. Poems
such as 'The Seducer's Diary' with its allusions to
Kierkegaard prove that, but more than the intellectual
acuity of the poems is an impassioned tone of pathos
and compassion. In "Fill the room with lilies",
he recounts a trip around Como, Italy with a lover
which ends on a balcony with a storm coming in, the
two characters in the poem witnessing something like
"the end of the world". And in "The
Ring", a wedding band is returned to a pawn store
with all the other "pornography and guns".
There seems to be an implicit
argument in the book which has something to do with
the loss of faith, tradition, and love in the poet's
life and in the life of our society's perhaps, that
I take it is the drowning of the saints, those ships
which sank off the west coast of Ireland during the
Spanish Armada's retreat. The poet refers to this
directly in "Tonight, the sea". And in one
enchanting poem, "The Red Dogs of Wicklow",
the red dogs are really fox's which echoes the Irish
word for fox, the poet writes about this sense of
loss, "with no benediction other than the thought
that things are passing from our lives". It leaves
him in a kind of secular world, a magical world, where
a dead fox "darts off in every direction possible".
Perry is indeed an Irish poet,
but a well travelled one. A poet who has been influenced
by the poetic tradition outside of the island. Perhaps
his years in America have something to do with that,
but I feel the sensibility to be still somewhat European.
Dream poems echo the Swedish poet Tomas Transtromer.
The lack of punctuation, the shape of the poem on
the page all of it intrigue the reader, something
which another Irish poet like Peter Sirr does.
I can do nothing but recommend
this collection as strongly as possible for anyone
interested, not only in contemporary Irish poetry,
but contemporary world poetry. It's an enjoyable read,
always entertaining, sometimes demanding. Salmon Poetry
(salmonpoety.com) have produced an attractive
collection and are to be commended on their high production
values. The book does not read like a first collection.
And with the publications Perry has behind him, the
TLS and Scribner's the Best American Poetry 2000,
a pantoum in homage to Paul Celan, that is no surprise.
The Drowning of the Saints is one of the best first
collections this reviewer has read in a long time
and Paul Perry is certainly one of the most exciting
Irish poets writing now.
David Arnold is a writer
and critic
The Drowning of the Saints,
Reviewed by Steve Mueske
threecandles.org, Nov. 2003, threecandles.org
Book rating: 8.5 out of 10 stars
Paul Perry's debut collection
of poems, The Drowning of the Saints, is as
good a book of poems as I've ever read, and certainly
one of the best first books. Poet, novelist and playwright
Fred D'Aguiar has called his work "a coalition of
imaginative flair and formal discipline." Critic David
Arnold writes "Paul Perry is certainly one of the
most exciting Irish poets writing now". I agree. While
it may be too early in his career to make such claims,
he seems destined to join the ranks of fellow countrymen
Paul Muldoon and Seamus Heaney as the Emerald Isle's
Poetry ambassadors to the world.
Perry's work, like the apples
in "Blessed is the fruit," is effective precisely
because it amplifies several related themes simultaneously.
It has a canny sense of music and balance, but not
so much that it stultifies the progression of images.
It begins:
Desolate apples, hold
tight in your bowl of water
red, blushing and blossoming light;
too big for the fruit bowl,
bitter pie stuff, clean and
eager
like some dowdy bouys
in a storm...
Already we can see that the applies
are not just apples. They signal innocence ("clean
and eager"), sexuality ("red, blushing and blossoming
light"), and later they become "biblical beacons /
of a lost faith", as much a symbol of temptation as
they are "bitter pie stuff," ordinary in their thingness.
In poem after poem, Perry performs
a kind of magic with words, each redolent with themes
that build toward a sustained song. In "The Red Dogs
of Wicklow" a group of boys look at a dead fox "with
no benediction other than the thought / that things
are passing from our lives". The speaker, prompted
by the scene of death, imagines the final image in
the fox's mind as those of red dogs, which I take
to mean Setters, or the fox's adversaries. As they
turn to walk away, however, the speaker looks back
to see the fox not only springing to life, but "skulking"
by a tree and then "darting off...in every direction
possible". Here we have a coming-of-age story, and
a lesson on survival by deception; we have empathy
and empathy turning on itself. That the animal is
a fox calls to mind all sorts of legends and stories,
including the Native American trickster. It was a
fox, too, that visited Lucille Clifton in The Terrible
Stories.
It's Perry's imagination that
I find most compelling. A good example of this is
"The Gate to Mulcahey's Farm," a two-page poem about
an unusual gate made of a bed's brass headboard. In
fourteen quatrains, he moves from description ("crooked
/ sinking into infirm soil like a ship") to speculation
about its history ("Perhaps this is another version
of heaven / imagine the bedroom it might once have
graced") and its future, sold "to an antiquarian in
a Dublin shop".
This is a first-rate collection
of poems that invites several reads, each as satisfying
as the last. I cannot recommend this book enough.
"What's New", The
Irish Echo, July28 - August 3, 2004
irishecho.com
This sensual and lyrical collection
of poems marks the debut of Dublin writer Paul Perry,
1998 winner of the Hennessy New Irish Writer of the
Year award. His distinctive voice creates poetry that
explores every person's search for meaning. "Each
poem bristles with life and longing, intelligence
and wit," says Fred D'Aguair, contemporary author
and poet. Published by Salmon Poetry. Distributed
by Dufour Editions.
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