Laurence Hutchman on Grand Blvd near Somerled, Montreal, March 2016 |
Laurence Hutchman
In
the Writers' Words, Conversations with Eight Poets
Guernica Editions, Toronto, 2011ISBN: 978-1-5507-309-1
Stephen Morrissey
Just before the interview which takes place in James Reaney's university office, Hutchman notes, "We sit on a green couch for the interview. On the wall facing us there is a painting of Reaney's, of The Nihilist Spasm Band. Above us is a picture, 'A Well Organized Athletic Meet on Centre Island, 1907 two women carrying eggs on a spoon.' Above those are topographical maps representing Grand Bend, St. Mary's and Stratford." Hutchman's awareness of the minutiae and detail of the place where the interview takes place enhances each interview that follows. In these interviews we are invited to know the human side of the eight different poets. Indeed, these conversations are an invitation for new readers to explore each poets' work.
Scholars will find In The Writers' Words, Conversations with Eight Poets a valuable source of insight into these poets' work; recent criticism I've written on Louis Dudek's major long poem "Continuation" has been deepened by reading the interview with him. I can hear Dudek's voice—engaging and inquiring—in his discussion with Hutchman; Dudek states,
In
Continuation 1 and Continuation 2, I at last found a voice
where
I
could say exactly what I want to say, and everything I want to say,
in
the most amazing fragmentary way... you have to take risks in poetry.
What
is poetry trying to do on the page? It's trying to represent the
poet's
thought.
Many
of us have fond memories of having met these eight poets. I remember meeting
James Reaney at a League of Canadian Poets AGM in Toronto; he was wearing a tie
decorated with books that I liked so much it took me a year before finding a
similar tie for myself. In Edmonton, a few years ago, Mark Abley's excellent
keynote address at the League's AGM was on Anne Szumigalski and it brought her
life and work to a new audience. Elsewhere, I heard Fred Cogswell and Ralph
Gustafson read their poems and from time to time corresponded with them. I sat
and talked with Al Purdy after one of the times I heard him read. Louis Dudek,
besides being my professor, was a friend until the end of his life. I remember
being a first year graduate student at McGill University and walking into the
English Department's staff lounge and seeing Laurence sitting discussing his
own poetry with Louis Dudek. Dudek's DC Books published Hutchman's first book, Explorations (1975). George Johnston was
a good friend, we both lived in rural south-western Quebec after he retired
from teaching at Carleton University. In addition to many discussions on poetry
George taught me the basics of the art of bee keeping which I did for many
years. George and his wife Jean were both good friends and warm-hearted people,
over the years of knowing them I also got to know some members of their family.
During their careers all of these poets that Hutchman interviews readily made
themselves available to newer poets. Reading Hutchman's conversations with them
reminds me of the generosity and welcoming spirit of this modernist generation
of poets, many of whom made an indelible impression on me.
All eight of these poets began writing and publishing during the 1930s to the1950s. Individually and collectively they made a significant contribution to Canadian poetry. P.K. Page, reminiscing about when she lived in Montreal, reminds us of poets we may have forgotten but who are still important for their role in Canadian literature, they include Patrick Anderson and John Sutherland. She also remembers with fondness Montreal poet A.M. Klein; Page says,
All eight of these poets began writing and publishing during the 1930s to the1950s. Individually and collectively they made a significant contribution to Canadian poetry. P.K. Page, reminiscing about when she lived in Montreal, reminds us of poets we may have forgotten but who are still important for their role in Canadian literature, they include Patrick Anderson and John Sutherland. She also remembers with fondness Montreal poet A.M. Klein; Page says,
... he was only nine years older than I but he seemed to belong to a different generation. This had to do with a series of things, I think, with the fact that he was married, had children, and a law practise. He was already established as a poet... I find him a wonderful poet and can't think why people today don't see it. But they will again.
In his
interview George Johnston discusses the literary scene back in the 1930s when
he was a student and had just begun writing; Johnston states, "To tell the
truth, I was hardly aware of a literary life in Toronto, except at the
university. There was one intellectual sort of magazine which came out once a
month..." This comment by Johnston reveals to us how far Canadian
literature has progressed over the last sixty or seventy years.
The eight
poets Hutchman interviewed spent a lifetime writing poetry and thinking about
poetry; theirs was a life centered on literature and poetry. The New
Brunswick-based poet Fred Cogswell, who did a tremendous service for poets
across Canada during his many years of running the literary small press,
Fiddlehead, makes this statement on "the philosophical nature of ...
poetry":The particular philosophical nature of poetry is that its function is to illustrate the qualities of the human mind that are the basis for the attitudes we have as human beings. Keep going farther than you've already gone, or you become a victim of what you've written up until that moment.
In the interview with P.K. Page, living at the west coast edge of the continent, in Victoria, BC, a clap of thunder is heard as the interview comes to an end. PK says to Hutchman, "You're conjuring up gods that we don't normally have." This is what Hutchman does in all of these interviews. He conjures the gods of poetry. Hutchman's interviews with each of these eight poets is an intimate conversation with each individual. We hear their voice, their commitment to poetry, and their example of a life lived for poetry. Hutchman's book stays vivid and lively and brings the reader directly into the personality and writing of each of the eight poets. For anyone of any age, either scholar or reader, who is interested in the modernist poets of Canada, this book is an indispensable companion to the poets' collected works. That is part of the magic of this book.
Stephen
Morrissey
Montreal,
September 3, 2013