languish
Upswell Publishing, $24 pb, 103 pp
Heels on the throat of song
The title of Marion May Campbell’s third poetry collection, languish, conjures ideas of laziness, daydream, failure to make progress, ennui, lack of enthusiasm, anhedonia. Campbell’s poetry is concerned with the excitement of language, but also its debasement. Several reviewers have commented on the work’s intertextuality (Campbell often employs compositional strategies such as parody, allusion, calque). Always the audience or reader is integral to shaping the text. For Campbell, importantly, the unsaid or unquestioned are as important as collaged lyric or contemporary language trace, as seen in these lines from the first poem in the collection, ‘speechless’:
the big print men shimmer in as
the luxury of our exquisite unsaid
develops over centuries from the filigree
we grope in the anticipatory susurration
fricatives sizzle somewhere for us
plosives plonk & roll like whiskered seals
amused in reef pools & listen as
the nasals find their flutes
we trust in our long withheld power
verbs that’ll paint us in
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