The Church of Omnivorous Light
Bloodaxe Books
ISBN 978-1-85224-966-3
223p, £12.
If you live in the US, it takes a determined effort to read
anything of contemporary UK poetry.
Writers like Wendy Cope, Lavinia Greenlaw, Gillian Clarke or John Burnside, widely
published and acclaimed in the UK, lack (so far) any U.S. publishers. The reverse is not so true. Both Faber and Bloodaxe regularly publish
U.S. writers, often first in selected volumes.
So it is that Robert Wrigley, Midwesterner by birth but staunchly
Western by long habitation, has reached a place in his career where Bloodaxe
Books (of Tarset, Northumbria, UK) has published for UK distribution his
selected poems, The Church of Omnivorous
Light (2013).
What
UK readers might make of Wrigley’s narrative music must really, of course, be
left to UK readers, though one notes immediately that Church carries a Poetry Book Society (London) Special Commendation. But it seemed like an interesting idea to
take Church along in the suitcase as
I traveled in the UK, and so it has proved.
One senses that UK readers – particularly those from Wales
and Cornwall – would recognize immediately the mining references in the book’s
second poem, “From Lumaghi Mine”: “Dear Father, / Eleven days without
sunlight. We go in / in the black
morning fog, work, and come out / having missed it all. But we begin to appreciate the dark.” UK readers would, I speculate, recognize,
too, the unflinching attention of “Coroner’s Report,” which in its imagery treats
the human body as both geology and flesh.
And though “Lull” seems to report the effects of a near tornado, it
could almost as easily be read as a new incarnation of Keatian observation applied
to a cracking September storm in the UK north: “Wind piled husks at the door /
and made us sleepy. / Sacks of onion hung from the cellar beams / like scrota
and swayed -- / or stood still while we did.”
Wrigley’s American influences (Frost, Dickey, Warren, Hugo)
may not necessarily be uniformly well known to UK audiences. But should a UK reader go back far enough –
to Wordsworth’s Prelude with its
emphasis on “spots of time” (moments of intense experience that carry within
them large import), then Wrigley’s work would certainly be seen as consistent
with this broad tradition. For early or
late in this book, Wrigley’s poems are frequently small masterpieces of
storytelling. Often they invoke
questions surrounding mortality. Here’s
an early example, from “Majestic,” the title referring to “The only word for
it, his white Lincoln’s arc / from the crown of the downriver road / and the
splash it bellied in the water.” Thus
begins a story of a car that has evidently sailed off a road, killing its
driver. And a much later example,
“Triage,” in which the speaker works to save a well-loved tree that a weight of
snow has split: “…I tied it off to a stouter tree // winched it upright again,
braced it with a two-by-four / plank notched and swaddled at the notched end /
in innertube ribbons, then guyed it off to the fir / that was to be the engine
of its reascension.”
Neither “Majestic” nor “Triage” ends with any sort of
summing up. Neither the speaker nor the
reader of “Majestic” understands why that car and driver took short flight off
the road and landed in the river. A
suicide? A momentary lapse of
attention? A medical crisis in the
seconds before? No answers. And in “Triage,” does the split tree survive
its crisis? Again, the poem doesn’t
say. So the moments, while intense and
fraught, remain unclear as to their implications. Rather they become more valuable for the questions
they evoke and make sharper. Wordsworth
might have done more interpreting for us, but the impulse to (paraphrasing him)
“recollect in tranquility” remains evident and foremost.
While Wrigley’s subjects are never trivial, it may be that
the music of his lines offers the larger frequent, consistent pleasure. In the earlier examples quoted, it’s hard not
to love the use of “swaddled” to refer to the wrapping of a tree. And in “Majestic,” that car “and the splash
it bellied” seems exactly apt to the picture it means to make. Wrigley takes pains with his descriptions and
listens attentively to his own ear (“the engine of its reascension”). In doing so, he honors and elevates a
reader’s attention.
UK readers might find in this book at least this striking contrast: The Church of Omnivorous Light
consistently features poems that originate in a distinctly Western American
sense of landscape. Wrigley’s poems are
often deeply sensitive to the vagaries of this landscape and its animal inhabitants. His poems take for granted a backdrop that UK
readers might struggle to recognize – a backdrop of landscape and ecosystem
left mostly to itself.
Such landscape and its assumptions underpin the book’s title
poem, which centers in the “fundamental squawking [of] / little Pentacostal
magpies, diminutive / raven priests” who are making a considerable fuss over
what the poem’s speaker notes is merely that “Someone’s gutted out a deer is
all.” And this same sense of residence
in a landscape alive with the wild also informs “Art” – another poem in which
that wildness (again in the form of a deer) has tangled itself in a barbed wire
fence: “He must have hit it full tilt in the dark, / momentum spinning him
through / and in, every thrash thereafter / sawing flesh, by the time I
arrived, / just past dawn, sawing deeper than bone.” Wrigley’s west is often imperiled, making
poems like “The Church of Omnivorous Light” and “Art” register as eulogies for a
wild neither fully wild nor fully disappeared.
The American West offers wide skies, a few mostly undomesticated
wilderness areas, often considerable distances between population centers of
any size, wide roads, and a cultural history that’s more veneer than solid
plank. The island of Britain, in contrast,
offers sometimes similarly wide skies, frequently narrow roads and streets –
sometimes made narrower by cars parked with one set of wheels on the road and
the other off – a landscape of relatively dense human habitation even in rural
areas, and a cultural history that, for writers, stretches back at least to
Beowulf, though it might better be said to begin with the first writer in
Westminster Abbey’s Poets’ Corner: Geoffrey Chaucer.
For all of that, UK readers familiar with Wordsworth, Hardy,
or John Clare – or for that matter, Alice Oswald – will have,
one suspects, little difficulty connecting with Wrigley’s images and varied music. Rightly a winner of numerous awards, Robert
Wrigley’s work will surely take its place as a continuing and formative
influence on writers in the American West.
As writers and readers, we in the West are in his debt. It’s at once gratifying and about time that
his work now finds a wider readership in the UK and beyond.
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