Caitlin Maling
 reviews Alex Skovron’s Towards the Equator: New and Selected Poems

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Towards the Equator: New and Selected Poems
by Alex Skovron

Puncher & Wattmann, 2014

While I was walking In the Museum of Fine Arts Houston with my cousin, I found myself discussing the conversations I seem doomed to repeat, the seemingly circular unending ones I’ve had over years, with myself and others without resolution. My cousin pointed out that to her a difference exists between two types of circular conversations, those truly round, and those that are elliptical, where with each repetition we reach a point closer to some type of truth before arcing out again. To me the joy and richness of encountering Alex Skovron’s Towards the Equator: New and Selected Poems is in travelling with the poet through these elliptical orbits as Skovron’s poems return and return to key motifs of European history, life in Australia and always, always, music.

The collection opens with ‘Towards the Equator’, 47 pages of new poetry. These poems are indicative of a mature poet, deeply located in the confluences of history, in a ‘day between the wars/ like any other’ (‘The Needle’, 9). There is less freneticism to the prosody than exists in later (younger) sections, instead lines and sentences are longer, measured, as in ‘Humility’ which opens with:

For months Mozart has been so crucial I haven’t played him.
The winds, filibustering the house, have heard
the chimney crackle and the paint strain
while the old obsessions went ignored. What was the point?
(13)

The only slight faltering of this strong new collection is the poem ‘De la Nature’, where the wit and lyrical strength of the lush polysyllabic diction (‘There was no soft agony of alternatives,/no stocky neo-nietzschean imperative,/no will to profounder cleansing’ (33)) is not enough to ground the poem. The same could be said about several of the poems through the collected volumes, where an investment in wordplay is out of balance with other poetic concerns.

It is interesting to travel backwards from the mature, settled, voice of Towards the Equator into The Rearrangements, Skovron’s earliest book, and then to proceed chronologically forward through the other four earlier collections. It is typical, and referenced in his publicity material for this collection, to refer to Skovron as ‘Eurocentric’ and indeed the best of his poems (new and old) share the deep historicity of Transtromer or Mandelstam. It is one of the strengths of the chronological arrangement that we see the poet/speaker develop this deep connection. In the earlier volumes there is a sense of dislocation as he casts out for identity in Australia, most brilliantly evoked in the long section poem ‘Lines from the Horizon’ from The Rearrangements (one of several extraordinary sequence poems through the collected works):

… It’s an art to inhabit

the vernacular Australia from within; finer art
if you’ve abandoned much more than a decade
anchored elsewhere. Key, unlocker of open gate
to the great anonymous society, this dialect is

world: not the fighting earthiness of Polish yards
or the urgent grit of Israel I managed to assume
in a year-long interlude, second childhood of
another day’s tale. No, I am speaking of Australian
(79)

Five years later in the 1992 volume Sleeve Notes the speaker is accustomed to his new place; ‘[a]t last he has learnt not to be noticed,/ he has become Australia’ but still ‘Ich Weiss night, was sol les bedeuten,/ sang the maps, mysterious with longing’ (118).

After these two early volumes Skovron becomes less inward looking, switching his primary interest from identity and history to form. Two of the volumes that follow are considerations of specific forms, ‘Infinite City’ of what Skovron terms sonnetinas (ten line mini-sonnets) and ‘The Autographs’ of the prose poem. Skovron is a poet of prosodic precision and it is in these two volumes that we see clearest how his attention to form allows him to embed poems of seeming dailiness with resonance, as in ‘Glisando’ from Infinite City:

From a train, each act is slowed, made trivial
in a sadness outside duration. That’s the real
wisdom of trains… You hurtle past a suburb: men limp
into doorways, schoolgirls stroll the sun, the street
vendors are statuettes with heavy mechanical limbs
(187).

These sections are key to my understanding of Skovron as a poet to whom repetition is a form of rigour, of prayer. Each version of the sonnet or prose poem layers upon those previous to build up a composite whole. It is tempting, giving Skovron’s interest in music, to read this in the vein of a symphony, all theme and variation, or a chorale singing in round. But there is something clinical about it, something akin to Jed Rasula saying ‘it’s experimental to write a sonnet or a sestina: as in a laboratory experiment, you have clearly delimited parameters and a cleat set of instructions. If these kinds of experiments have not attracted legions of practicing poets, that’s because it’s a very old and familiar experiment, the results of which strike many as incapable of bearing news’ (128). Skovron’s forms provide us with news, not just in each poem but in how the poems relate to one another, both within and across volumes. It is deeply satisfying to read a collected works which is more defined by an intensification of theme than by a linear progression.

Constantly reading and re-reading these poems, I found myself returning to ‘Sisyphus’ as a touchstone where ‘(t)he path to wisdom is difficult, rich and mundane’ (111). Perhaps what is most interesting about Skovron, to me, is how easily he moves between poems embedded in history and the sacred to poems of the everyday. It is hard to think of another poet who can occupy the mystical realm of ‘History’ where ‘On the sidewalks on the city I’ve discovered/ the walking numberless, a myriad gliding heads,/ from each of which (an airshop suspended above it)/ there trails a bubble by the flimsiest of threads’ as readily as the mundane world of ‘Jam’ where ‘The little larrikin/ not content with cake, is plucking at a plate/ of soggy sushi, sister fends him off,/ the mother curses, dad reconceals himself/ behind his scarlet frame. I head into my sky’ (4, 31).

Alex Skovron

Alex Skovron

*Caitlin Maling has published poetry, non-fiction and reviews throughout Australia and the US, most recently in Best Australian Poems 2012, Westerly, ThreePenny, Cordite and Australian Poetry. Her first collection, conversations I’ve never had, will be published by Fremantle Press in 2015.

**Taken from Cordite Poetry Review at http://www.cordite.org.au

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