At
last, someone has had the good sense to assemble a collection of poems by that
gifted minimalist, Pearl Blink. The enterprising Buck Sheen of Tight Press
deserves our heartfelt thanks.
These poems have appeared in a diversity of magazines (one of the longer pieces
is regularly requested on BBC Radio 4's Poetry
Please!) but it is a joy to have them to read and reread in one handy and
handsome volume.
Blink
was never one to court the limelight and, since her premature death in 2000, at
the age of 32, little serious attention has been given to her work. The
publication of Wee should improve
matters greatly.
The
pivotal poem of the collection is surely 'Pen'.
I will quote it in its entirety:
I am
Bic.
For
most of her adult life, Blink belonged to the strict Northumbrian sect, The
Tillers. They rigorously eschew anything which might be deemed modern or
mechanical and, indeed, Blink
usually
wrote with a quill pen fashioned from a pheasant's feather. The casual reader,
unaware of these facts, might see 'Pen' as a poem expressing contentment -
self-satisfaction, even. Could it be a celebration of practicality and
plasticity? Oh, no: that would be a crass misinterpretation. We are to be guided by the precisely-placed
line-break which lets us know that Blink is addressing the humble ballpoint pen
directly and is telling it that she exists, she is, despite its invention (and,
by implication, the invention of most other new-fangled devices and contraptions).
The
Tillers are based in and around the Northumbrian hamlet of Rennington, and it
was there that Blink involved herself in her second great love, apiary. Had she
lived longer, would we have had some delightful little poems about honey? Who
can tell? Wee, however, does include
the terrifying 'The Swarm':
Bee, bee,
bees.
So
perfectly succint. Do I hear buzzing? Yes. There's a bee. And another. And,
help, run!
We
can try to tame nature. We can destroy
it (inevitably we think here of Wordsworth's 'Nutting') but it has the power to
return, to be reborn, and, in some cases, destroy us (earthquakes, tornadoes). So many messages, in three words. 'The Swarm' is Blink at her expansive best.
I
have committed several of the Wee
poems to memory, but there is one in particular which I find myself reciting
aloud in quieter moments:
Remedial
Atishoo!
A tissue.
The
precariousness of our existence is again hinted it. The only remedy available
is a thin sheet of paper. The lines sound the same, but are different.
Here, we can't trust our ears. Can we trust what we hear on the radio, or what
our political leaders tell us? But Blink's message is never without hope. In
'Remedial' we have two perfect amphibrachs. We have balance in the traditional
metre; the old methods can bring redemption, and a future. The poem is also quite funny.
First published in issue 9 of SPHINX.
*
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