Radical Innocence
- Publisher
- Harbour Publishing Co. Ltd.
- Initial publish date
- Jan 1994
- Category
- Canadian, General
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781550171075
- Publish Date
- Jan 1994
- List Price
- $12.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Radical Innocence is an "invitation to reverie," a collection of poems that is at once suffused with marvels and a brilliant historical and cultural critique of our society's development. In this ambivalent look at classical christian attitudes and how they have influenced the western world, Pass moves beyond the ordinary, taking images and personal concerns from our everyday lives and shaping them into a poetic consciousness that is both intimate and immediate. This volume is an exploration of the relationship between father and son; a reflection on the current state of our environment; a "reprieve for the body", ...so near, forsaken, so sullen with its losses/ it won't come in for calling for the longest time; and a meditation upon the "radical innocence" christianity praises, promises and ultimately compromises.
About the author
John Pass’s poems have been published in Canada, the US, the UK, Ireland and the Czech Republic. He is the author of twenty books and chapbooks, most notably the quartet AT LARGE, comprised of The Hour’s Acropolis (Harbour, 1991), Radical Innocence (Harbour, 1994), Water Stair (Oolichan Books, 2000)—shortlisted for the Governor General’s Award—and Stumbling in the Bloom(Oolichan Books, 2005)—winner of the Governor General’s Award. crawlspace, from Harbour in 2011, won the Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize. Forecast: Selected Early Poems (1970–1990), appeared in 2015. He lives with his wife, writer Theresa Kishkan, near Sakinaw Lake on BC’s Sunshine Coast.
Excerpt: Radical Innocence (by (author) John Pass)
A Small Blue Banknote, Dear Companion
Were you a woman, featureless in layer upon
layer of outerwear, as we struggled up the road?
And the hope we pulled through the wet snow
astir in its yellow sleepers on the little sleigh
ours? I was the way I used to be
with women. Incapable
of the inevitable, incapable of grace
in the final hours: fearful, angry
grieving already, self-pitying. . .
until we got off the streetcar and could see
how they were shelling the old city, see the arc
entire of the mortar, the miraculous distance we'd come
from the shuddering explosions. Here the atmosphere
is distinctly middle-eastern, that hour between
too late at night and too early in the morning
the air soft as if a new faith or delusion
were being born from old texts, the hand-worn
hieroglyphics-tentative, reaching, calm.
It's my small blue banknote
the last between us, gets us into the nearly closed
cafe, the mezes and Turkish coffee before me
you a step out the door in the neutral light
half-turned, half-smiling, getting away
and on the bar the heap
of hastily torn scraps of paper.
A hatful upturned of ticket stubs, ad hoc ballots?
Unmarked, enigmatic, left to me. . .
all of our nameless chances to win.
Terminal Velocity
Ask the man going in to his sleepless son last thing
for a further word re the carburetor.
Likewise the water rising in the tub
as you eased under.
Was it hot enough, Archimedes? Sudsy?
A nibble anon Mr. Newton, or what's an apple for?
Beneath the force that makes the apple fall
the best ideas are domestic, that old sink
for watercress in the garden's wet corner
a lock-nut on the idle screw, red pepper jelly --
or just when she's got the kids off to school
pouring her second coffee
and you call down
"Hey, honey, come back to bed a moment."