Shoreline Press (2022), 70 pp., $14.95 (paper). Available here.
In her poetry collection about the
Covid epidemic, Chaos Theories of Goodness, Tanya Bellehumeur-Allatt remarks that if
you’d predicted during the cheerful New Year’s celebration of 2020, what
actually was about to happen, she would never have believed it, let alone
imagined it. But it did, and so now, with her wings and ours too, clipped, she shows
how the use of imagination gave her a path through the ordeal. Stuck unexpectedly
at home, she dealt with her cabin fever and concern by writing a daily poem.
Chaos Theories is a series of poetic commentaries about
her – and our – life while flapping dispiritedly within the cage of Covid 19.
She discusses the details, both inner and outer, of suffering enforced
domesticity.
There’s no shrill outrage or bellyaching here,
just her sincere, quietly earnest voice expressing real anxiety at this contemporary
plague. In her poem “Passover Prayer,” she writes: “May the angel of Death/on
its gruesome flight/over nation, province, village/pass over us.”
Like all of us, she deeply longs for the bug to be
gone, when she’ll happily join the rest of us with “the whistles, warbles and
shouts/of our communal cheer.” But she also recommends a little proportion. In
the poem “Plague,” she describes a huge East African cloud of locusts blocking
daylight, so voracious they’ll “eat the tongue/right out of your mouth.” While
in another piece, aptly titled “Perspective,” she tells how monstrous African
floods have displaced and left thousands destitute.
So, count your blessings.
She proposes that one way to do this, when your
secure routines are swept away, is first to accept and even ratify the change,
as in “Looking at Caravaggio’s Entombment”: “You are right where you belong.”
Then, to seek nourishment in and note the small, meaningful things, which she
describes in “My List of Small Things.” Also, she reminds us that mass dislocations
– particularly epidemics – while painful at first and isolating, have paradoxically
permitted the time for learning and great bursts of creativity in the arts and other
fields.
Bellehumeur-Allatt writes: “I sign us up for
lessons online:/ … We will emerge from our quarantine like Shakespeare/ And
Newton, with theories and plays and solutions.”
The poet is not into unchecked moaning and
groaning! She seeks out the constructive side of our current tribulation. Also,
the funny one. Her fine sense of humour shows in “Dishevelment: A Sonnet,”
where she laments how with the hairdressers shut due to the lockdown, our hair,
grown out and self-styled by our own amateurish hands, is such a sight, the
only solution is to “turn our mirrors to the wall.” Elsewhere, she prophesies mischievously
that, after the epidemic, there will be a similar outcome as that which followed
the Great Northeast Blackout – plenty of babies!
Bellehumeur-Allatt’s poems are serious but also,
when life urgently requires it, comic and even light-hearted. Moving,
intelligent, always accessible, they eloquently speak to and for us in this
abnormal and surprising time.
***
Steve Luxton lives in Hatley, Quebec,
and is currently Writer in Residence at the Lennoxville Library. This article
originally appeared in The Townships Sun (Vol. 49 No. 5 February 2022)
p. 17.
Note: You can read a whole collection of Covid pieces
on Quick Brown Fox, including two poems from Tanya and even a piece by me. Just
click here
and scroll down. ~Brian
See Brian Henry’s
upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and weekend retreats here.
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