SPM Publications
ISBN:
978-0956810120
‘Best After Frost’
was chosen by the Inter Board Poetry Community as their poem of the year 2011,
and quite right too. Medlars – who remembers medlars? More to the point, who will
be able to forget this ‘smutty fruit’ after reading a garnet-red and delicious
slurpy-slimy poem that sets the tone for an extraordinarily vivid collection. I
would have been happy with a whole book of Pannett’s nature poetry, could have
sat back in a comfy chair and read through one brilliant imagist poem after
another, but it was not to be. By the second poem, I was having to start googling
references. This was not a chore – this was a Good Thing. I will explain.
Pannett breaks us in
gently with the word. ‘psychopomp’. Great word, but I didn’t know what it meant
so looked it up. The definition made perfect sense. Pannett could have used an
easier word in her poem title, but why should she? Why dumb down? The chosen
word is always precisely the right word, never the one that is better known but
might not do the job so well. In ‘Psychopomp: a Guide’, Pannett explores the
fine line that is the meeting place between the contemporary and the
mythological. This theme runs through the entire collection. Ancient and modern
– are we really so different from our ancestors? ‘Two For One’ is an age old
tale of vengeance told in a contemporary setting, so any doubts that we’re
somehow different is quickly dispelled. The ancients will have their say later
in the collection, and they go far, far further back than I expected – but more
on that later.
Pannett expects her
readers to have a reasonable familiarity with concepts from the ancient times
through the dark ages to the Renaissance and beyond. Unfortunately not all of
us have her level of erudition, but we no longer need volumes of Encyclopedia
Britannica weighing down our teak veneer wall units – we have Wikipedia – and
even if we didn’t, the poems stand by themselves without the necessity to know
all the references. Knowledge adds an angle, a colour – but it’s not essential.
We can read about the traveller from the ship of fools as he explores dry land,
and sense the irony because Pannett has made it clear and has no interest in
veiling her message. You’d be hard pressed not to understand the poem even if
you didn’t know the historical uses of the image. I became so used to looking
stuff up that when I came to poems where I was sure I was missing references, I
actually emailed the author for clues. As often as not, it turned out that the
poem in question was exactly what it said it was and I didn’t need a Masters in
Classics or anything else. Sometimes a hare in a field is just a hare in a
field. One forgets.
One of the most
intriguing offbeat facts I learned from this collection was that Catherine of
Aragon brought sweet potatoes to England as part of her dowry. Pannett was not making
this one up. I checked. And Henry VIII really did set a competition for growers
in England, none of whom managed to cultivate the plant
successfully. Out of this random historical fact, Pannett has built a powerful
and unusual poem. In ‘Trust the Sun’, Odysseus makes his first appearance.
He’ll be back – unless I’m misreading one of the poems, which is always
possible. They are so rich in ideas, it’s easy to go off at a tangent and see
tales that aren’t really there, but that’s an undeniable strength as it brings
out the story-teller in the reader.
You think you know
certain images, but you don’t, not really; not until you’ve viewed them through
Pannett’s eyes. What if a horse in the Bayeux tapestry could speak? What indeed. The poor
beast would suffer ‘bowels of blancmange’ before experiencing the terrible
transitions of its brief history, assaulted by ‘arrows like blowflies’. And
what is really going on in Millais’ painting of Isabella (she who loved a
severed head) that arrived via Boccaccio and Keats and ended up dissected by
Mandy Pannett’s pen? Everything is in precise Pre-Raphaelite sharp focus in the
painting, and also in the poem, but here it’s at an oblique angle. There’s
probably a doctoral thesis to be written exploring the difference in precision
between words and pictures with specific reference to Isabella.
In Durham Botanical Gardens there’s a block of marble
engraved with Basil Bunting’s famous lines from Briggflatts: ‘Pens are too
light. Take a chisel to write’. I thought of that line on reading ‘Mottoes on
Sundials’, as well as the more obvious ‘Time is. Time was. Time is past’ which supposedly
originates in Greene’s Elizabethan play ‘Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay’ despite
sounding much older. Be that as it may, Pannett has found inspiration in the
mottoes engraved on sundials. This is a lovely idea. She has taken each
inscription and turned it into a poem. Aulus
and Lucius built their sundial in Pompeii, so there is great resonance in the lines
about voids in the ash – but Pompeii is never mentioned. I find this theme of
taking scenes from antiquity and showing them from a different angle refreshing
and beguiling.
In ‘Stopping a Bunghole’, I can’t help but feel we have the
complete thoughts of Shakespeare (but mostly Hamlet) in one short poem. And why
not. This is certainly one possible reading. Pannett never lays down
strictures; never insists on a specific meaning. She gives you the best words
in the best order, but after that it’s up to you, as should be the case with
all literature.
I’m an art nut, so for me, personally, it’s the art poetry that
does it; that makes me want to read and re-read. If you want to know how to
seduce this particular reader, write about Dürer. I know the artist, now show
me the man. This is precisely what Pannett does. Just as I’ve settled into the Renaissance,
however, ‘A New Cartography’ comes along and I’m yanked back into the present;
a present so removed from the past that this reads as sci-fi at first, but no –
it’s contemporary. This is real. This is happening now. I’m back in the present
and seconds later I’m addressing a ‘True Fly’ which unexpectedly takes me into
DH Lawrence territory and made me think of his mosquito poem. Then, without warning, we jump back to ancient
times with ‘Group of Eight’. Coincidentally, when I first read this poem
I’d just been looking at Neanderthal cave paintings of seals looking weirdly
like double helix DNA. There
is something about cave art that ties us together across the millennia in a way
words cannot. Language grows and changes. The owners of those eight hands
wouldn’t speak any language we know, but we know what a bison looks like and we
understand the concept of deer flying across the sky – we’ve never lost that
sense of wonder, of the numinous in nature.
‘The Hurt of Man’ needs to be read with Sibelius playing in
the background to get into the right mood. This one sent me scurrying off to
find out who ploughed the field of vipers and to generally renew my woefully
slight acquaintance with the ‘Kalevala’. I like poetry that says, ‘Look, here’s
something that happened that you may have read about – go and read more’. I did,
and I’m glad I did.
The poetry of the potential typo is represented in the
lovely misreading poem, ‘The Starling Point’ where the dull little church of St
Olave Hart Street is transformed by the idea of ‘a word / misread that ushers
in rune-stones’, but just as the reader settles into this comfortable place,
Pannett throws ‘Stunted’ into the mix, a searing poem of what happens when a
child has to find some way to survive a cruel upbringing – one of the most
powerful and unsettling images of the entire collection.
‘Later, All At Once’ is a wondrous bunch of snippets. No,
snippets is too mean a word. A time-traveller’s compendium of moments? Yes, that’s
closer. A veritable gallimaufry of images, all of them precise, every one crystal
clear. Another clear image sings through in ‘Every Last Bell’. I’ve drawn that
bridge with its ‘glittering vertebrae’. This falcon’s eye view of the City zooms
in on what might not be immediately obvious, but is no doubt somebody’s prey. When
reading this one I couldn’t help thinking of Macbeth and the bell that summons Duncan
to heaven or hell. On the subject of sounds – I want to hear the reconstructed
fossil’s chirp. Read the collection, and you will too, I promise.
Driftwood has so much more resonance than dust or clay. In
‘Woman-Tree’ I had to assume Pannett was channelling her Norse forebears, and
if she hasn’t got any, that’s quite bizarre. Of course she’s got some. Must
have. Without getting all Jungian about it, there’s a strong impression of
collective memory at work here. Her ancestors could read this newly written
poem and understand every word, every reference and every thought. Stories – we
all have stories. We understand such things. William Shakespeare wrote many of
them down for us, which is handy. ‘Titania’s Wood’ takes me straight to the
1935 Fritz Reinhardt version of ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’, one of my absolute
favourite Shakespeare adaptations for the dangerous other-worldness with which
he imbues the visuals. I’m convinced that while the cameras were pointing one
way, this poem was happening somewhere else, very nearby.
There are so many more wonderful images in this collection.
I wanted to list them all, but knew that would be impossible. Read the book instead,
as that’s where you’ll find faces of foxes, whimsical looks at the heart,
achingly sad poems, and others that make you remember how extraordinarily
potent cheap music can be (thank you Noel Coward). Then clutch your birthstone
and hope for salvation.
Or visit Room 44 at the National Gallery. I’m talking
‘Seurat, It’s a Long Sunday’ here. The Sunday picture is of course ‘A Sunday on
La Grande Jatte’. The picture on ‘the other side’ has to be ‘Bathers at
Asnières’ from the description. The poem tells the reader to go north – the
empty beach, I would guess, is ‘The Channel of Gravelines, Grand Fort-Philippe’
and your boat can be tied up on the river bank (The Seine at Asnières). I tend
to go even further north. I love Akseli Gallen-Kallela’s ‘Lake
Keitele’, and if it’s not mentioned
in so many words in the poem, it’s only because we’re concentrating on Seurat’s
work. It’s still there. You can’t miss it. Go and have a look. Does the reader
need to be familiar with this particular room in the gallery? I know these paintings
so well, I find it impossible to do a ‘new’ reading of the poem, so I really have
no idea.
After Seurat, we have Monet – his life in reverse through ‘A
Suggestion of Leaves’, a beautifully conceived and executed poem, but before
getting too comfortable with the French Impressionists, we’re yanked back in
time again. Mesolithic morphs into Neolithic, but hindsight is unavailable to
this stone age man. Is this progress? He can’t tell.
Why didn’t I know the paintings of Eric Ravilious? I do now.
I read the poem, looked up the artist. Ah – a student of Paul Nash. I love
Nash’s work. I’m taking so long looking at the paintings, I’ve forgotten about
the poem. Go back to look at it. This is an artist I should explore further,
but before I do that there are a few gentle poems and then suddenly we’re back
to pre-history and crossing the land bridge that brought people from Siberia
to America.
‘The Kelp Days’ is a stunning poem. Vivid and real and immediate. I’m not
surprised to find it won first prize in the Wirral Festival of Firsts 2011.
Remember Odysseus? His father was Old Laertes. Did Odysseus
dream of the artichokes and olive groves back on old Ithaca
when he was far, far away? I certainly think Pannett dreams of the South
Downs. That distinctive countryside pervades much of the
collection, particularly the title poem, ‘All the Invisibles’. At this point
the reader is nearly at the end of the book. Just a few more intriguing facts
to learn ‘Ignatius of Antioch Looks for Stars’. He does? Okay, I’ll look him
up, and also try to find the Peckham Rye reference and – good grief. In 1767,
William Blake visited Peckham and had a vision of an angel in a tree. I didn’t
know that. Oh yes – the poem. What was that about? I return... I’ve a feeling
the music of the spheres is going to link this poem to the last: ‘Aeolian
Rain’. Yes it does. Angels; this is all about angels – maybe. And everything
else.
I’ve resisted talking about aspects of the poems that put
one in mind of the collective unconscious or archaic remnants mostly because I
don’t know enough about such concepts to say anything sensible, but if I did
know about them, I’d be able to analyse this collection and explain its
universality in a very technical way. As I don’t, I’m relieved to be able to
suggest you read the book instead. I can guarantee that these poems are far
more enlightening than any essay I might be able to write. Ideally, take the collection
to an art gallery and read it there. You might suffer sensory overload, but it
will be worth it.
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