Poem for Catrina LongmuirTwo nails extend from the wall beside my bed. The painton the wall is textured, like a rough fabric. Flakes of painterupt where the nails extrude. As if they are trying to holdthe nails in. The paint on the wall is grey, or a blue, ora mottled green. Like my father, I am colour-blind. Fromeach nail a thin shadow extends horizontally to the right.To the left of the nail on the left, and up, a shadow massbegins from the corner of an unfolded piece of paper lyingon a foot-high stack of books on an end table. The shadowmass continues down and to the right, just missing the nail,veering diagonally down, passing four inches belowthe nail on the right, with a couple of sharp drops, likea New Mexico horizon. My friend Richard died inNew Mexico. The unfolded paper is a photocopy ofa tender poem he wrote at twenty, based on a photographof himself, his sister, and his brother. Richard’s poem ends,“Let the wind blow / You couldn’t stop it if you tried.”The nails supported your painting, Catrina,for nearly a decade.
Nails:
“Poem
for Catrina Longmuir” opens on two nails, visible because a painting no longer
covers them. We don’t learn about the painting’s absence until the poem’s
conclusion, but we know the potential for loss right away when “[f]lakes of
paint / erupt where the nails extrude. As if they are trying to hold / the
nails in” (2-4). Still, the speaker discloses the painting’s absence in terms
of how long it had been present and in terms of a continuing relationship with
its artist: “The nails supported your painting, Catrina, / for nearly a decade”
(18-19). Catrina’s painting is gone—but this poem is for her and speaks
directly to her.
And
Richard (outside of this poem, Ross has noted the recent loss of his friend,
poet Richard Huttel) is gone—but his poems are not and one of them casts its
shadow through this one. Like two nails, Richard and Catrina support this poem.
When people connect through art, what can be lost, and what can’t be, and how
do we live well with both the lost and the held? That this poem quotes from
Richard’s poem does not make me think so much that one lives on through one’s
art (Catrina’s painting is gone, so this poem doesn’t position art as eternal),
but that one lives on in the relationships that art has helped create. These
relationships are more expansive than the art itself—Richard’s poem’s shadow
stretches across the wall, past its page’s borders.
Contrast:
Like
the “shadow mass” of Richard’s poem “veering diagonally down” the wall, each
“ex” in the first stanza’s “extend,” “textured,” and “extrude” together form a
downward diagonal line (9-11; 1-3). The veering line moves to the right, like
all the poem’s shadows. “Ex,” carrying meaning like “deprive” or “remove” or
“cancel,” suggests, like shadows do, absence. But a shadow is an absence (no
light) while also the sign of a presence (light, and something blocking it).
Shadow is contrast. This poem’s last stanza contrasts its first, its shape
forming a downward diagonal line to the left and mirroring the slash (/) it
contains, which indicates the quoted poem’s line break. A line break means,
yes, the end of a line, but also the imminent appearance of the next. The
juxtaposition of Richard’s line—“Let the wind blow / You couldn’t stop it if
you tried” (17)—with the painting’s absence suggests acceptance that one can’t
stop loss. At the same time, the same logic (that the wind keeps blowing)
suggests that loss is not like an ending.
Based:
This
poem is interested in what things are like:
the wall’s paint “is textured, like a rough fabric” (1-2), the shadow has “a
couple of sharp drops, like / a New Mexico horizon” (12-13), and this speaker,
colour-blind “[l]ike my father,” would see the painting only like the painter
did (5). Ross approximates, too, in word pairings that don’t sound the same but
look like they should (like blind/thin) or that almost rhyme (like
nails/paint). A shadow is like absence and also like presence.
Shadows
indicate the existence of a light source somewhere further on, like a photocopy
of a poem “based on a photograph / of [Richard], his sister, and his brother”
(15-16). The photocopy leads to the poem which leads to the photograph which
finally leads to the people themselves. While Richard’s poem is conceptually
based on a photograph of family, its photocopy is physically based “on a
foot-high stack of books on an end table” (9), much like the nails “supported”
Catrina’s picture. The “end table” carries a stack of books, a cultural context
on top of which Richard’s poem can remain “unfolded” (14), casting its shadow.
To follow the shadow is to find the shadow mass, the weight on the end that is
actually a table.
Note to Readers
I
appear here as a reader of these poems offering models of response, aiming to
open up possibilities for other readers. I’ve connected with the poets, and I’d
now love to connect with other readers. How do you respond to these poems? Do
you have questions or comments about my readings? Or about this project? Please
get in touch with me at deicticpress@gmail.com.
Stuart Ross is the winner of
the 2019 Harbourfront Festival Prize for his contributions to Canadian
literature. His 20 books of fiction, poetry, and essays include Motel of the Opposable Thumbs (Anvil Press, 2019), Pockets
(ECW Press, 2017), and A Sparrow Came Down Resplendent (Wolsak and Wynn, 2016). Stuart was the 2010 Writer in
Residence at Queen’s University. His poetry has been translated into Spanish,
French, Slovene, Russian, Nynorsk, and Estonian. Stuart lives in Cobourg,
Ontario.
Dale Tracy, a contract faculty member, is an
assistant professor in the Department of English, Culture, and Communication at
the Royal Military College in Kingston, Ontario. She is the author of With
the Witnesses: Poetry, Compassion, and Claimed Experience (McGill-Queen’s,
2017) and the chapbooks Celebration
Machine (Proper Tales, 2018) and The
Mystery of Ornament (above/ground, 2020). She received an honourable mention in
Kalamalka Press’s 2019 John Lent chapbook award contest.