The Cruelty-Free Ivory Tower: a recovering grad student
presents tongue-in-cheek semi-academic poetry reviews
Conyer Clayton’s chapbook Trust Only the Beasts in the Water (above/ground press, 2019) is an account of the poet’s
dreams, rife and rippling with the unsettling confusion and nonsensical-sense-making
which power the strange logics of any dream world. Clayton underscores this in
her beautiful and unsettling path between and betwixt dreams in this chapbook,
presenting the reader and studier of these poems with a journey through
distortion and revelation.
And, in many ways, these poems are as much
about revelation as they are about dreams – both the revelation of meaning, and
Revelation in a more biblical sense. Literary apocalypse theory dictates that
the world is—or will be— divided into two groups, both of which we see clearly
in Clayton’s work: the elect and the non-elect (Goldman 10). In layman’s terms:
the worthy will be chosen to survive, and the unworthy will be sacrificed in
order for true utopia to be created. Many celebrated literary works study this
divide, both explicitly and implicitly: we might think here of the Bible (in
which the unworthy are repeatedly sacrificed, as in the great flood, in order
to build a new world for those chosen by God), or Lord of the Rings (in
which the undesirable must be vanquished in order for peace and prosperity to
reign for those able and willing to build a successful, utopian community).
And yet this narrative is, as many have
pointed out, simplistic at best and vitally dangerous at worst; after all, genocide
has long been conducted in the name of utopia. Perhaps unsurprisingly, we begin
to run into trouble with apocalypse once we leave the Bible behind: without God
to explicitly separate the good from the evil, the redeemable from the
irredeemable, the categories of elect and non-elect— who deserves to live and
who doesn’t— become dangerously muddied and subject to petty human biases and
bigotry.
What Clayton presents in this chapbook, then,
is a series of poems about dreams, yes, but also a classic anti-apocalyptic
narrative: a perspective from the side of those in power who seek to hunt,
erase, or expel the non-elect—or, at least, those they deem unworthy—from the
overarching utopian framework. And yet, as the speaker of Clayton’s dream poems
races away from danger and those who seek to harm or stop her, she becomes
dangerous in turn: a strident voice in the darkness which resists easy
classification and demands a more complex solution to revelation.
This lesson is perhaps no clearer than in the
penultimate poem of the collection, titled “Inclement”, in which the narrator
inhabits a difficult cognitive divide: she sees both her own worthiness,
indelible in her desire “to be treated as kindly as a flat surface”, and the
precariousness put upon her by the perspective of the elect, and which she
rightly sees as an attack which recasts her body as “a desert under constant threat
of sandstorm”.
As the poem — and the apocalypse —
progresses, this threat does indeed transform into the destruction feared by
the narrator, as her body turns to sand and begins to flake and scatter. At
first, this sand merely exists in proximity to the narrator — “on the soles of
[her] feet” and “in the folds of [her skin]” — mimicking the way in which the
perspective of the elect, who seek her destruction, place their expectations
and desires on her body. Quickly, however, the narrator herself transcends metonymy
and inhabits the metaphor — herself becoming sand, and therefore realizing the
“constant threat of sandstorm” that she so fears.
However, our narrator importantly and
poignantly accepts her own dissolution and destruction through this apocalyptic
violence, describing her body as divided and “sprinkled across the world —
picnic blanket, towel, a jar with a shell on a desk, the bottom of a man-made
lake, your hair, a fishies’ mouth, your mouth, soil, part of the soil, draining
water from an urban garden, tickling the roots of house plants, in a mirror”.
In short: the violence of the apocalypse turns the non-elect narrator to sand,
destroying and scattering her in order to pave the way for the elect to build
and subsequently inhabit their idealized utopia.
While the narrator does, indeed, seem to be
destroyed— disintegrated and cast into far-flung and disparate locations, as
was the ancient Egyptian god Osiris at his death— her destruction instead
proves the possibility of resisting and overturning the seemingly inexorable
progress of apocalypse. She is divided and the pieces of herself are separated,
yes, but into places which the newfound sand of herself is seen as useful,
nostalgic, or necessary. Even seemingly destroyed, Clayton seems to say, the
bodies of the non-elect will be impossible to remove from utopia entirely, and
will instead remain necessary to its continued prosperity. That which the elect
seek to destroy will, instead, remain ironically vital to their continued success.
And, as we see with the poem’s conclusion,
perhaps this destruction is as cyclical as the apocalypse itself. The last
named resting place for the narrator’s body is repeated to the reader like a
mantra: “in a mirror, in a mirror, in a mirror”. The narrator is both the sand
which melts to form the perfect reflective surface and the body reflected
within it: a doubled interiority which strengthens the narrator’s position of
resistance and excises her from the apocalyptic narrative. A body becomes sand,
which becomes the vessel for the reflection of a body, which is finally,
gratefully, allowed to “gaze back at [herself], lying thirsty in bed.”
This thirst — a desire perhaps more human
than any other — concludes the poem, echoing the narrator’s similar desire for
care in her wish “to be treated kindly”, to become “something steady”. This thirst
— for water and therefore for self-sustainability, for care — floats through
the poem, from the “desert” and “sandstorm” of the first line to the centre image
of “draining water from an urban garden”. Our narrator is acquainted with
thirst, yes, and with the constraining expectations placed upon her by both
herself and by the biased and destructive view of the elect. In the end,
however, it is not thirst which defines her, but rather the mirror — the object
which she creates precisely through her
destruction, and in which she steadfastly gazes at herself, constructs herself,
and centres herself once more as a human being who refuses to be broken down
for the good of the empire.
Cited:
Clayton, Conyer. Trust
Only the Beasts in the Water. above/ground press, 2019.
Goldman, Marlene. Rewriting
Apocalypse in Canadian Fiction. McGill-Queen's Press-MQUP, 2005.
Dessa Bayrock lives in Ottawa with two
cats and a variety of succulents, one of which occasionally blooms. She used to
fold and unfold paper for a living at Library and Archives Canada, and is
currently a PhD student in English, where she continues to fold and unfold
paper. Her work has appeared in Funicular, PRISM, and Poetry
Is Dead, among others, and her work was recently shortlisted for the
Metatron Prize for Rising Authors. She is the editor of post ghost press. You
can find her, or at least more about her, at dessabayrock.com, or on Twitter at
@yodessa.