Pavilion
Stephanie Bolster
McClelland & Stewart
$16.99
paper
72pp
0-7710-1558-5
A girl, a real girl,
died. Lightning
hit her. Her mother dead
not two months. And so,
art? Tell me something.
These five frank lines are taken from “Girl,” a 12-page lament for the two lives where Bolster appears to invite the idea of perishability into the poem itself, thereby disassembling her writing into anecdotal after-images, confessional hints, and self-dissolving personal details. But “Girl” also draws its inspiration from Vermeer’s famous painting “Girl with a Pearl Earring,” and the Dutch master is, in fact, the metaphoric pivot the entire collection turns on. Again and again, Bolster reads Brebner and Anya’s deaths into some aspect of Vermeer’s art, and tests the insights she finds there against her newfound doubts concerning the function of her poetry. There are no real answers, of course, but everything in Pavilion – and particularly Bolster’s vision of her vocation – is menaced by this extraordinary elegiac panic. From the opening sequence on her Vancouver childhood home (“The Stillness That Turns The House”), to her fascination with the principles of Japanese culture (“Japanese Pavilion”) to the unsettling dream narratives that periodically interrupt (“Antique Glass”), Bolster is constantly startling herself into chilly, ghost-ridden regions of the mind, as in “What Price”:
We wear down bars of soap
with our palms, stone
steps with our feet. Light
will rub that drawing,
imperceptibly at first, till
the girl’s face vanishes.
I’ve quoted the first two stanzas, but there’s that “girl” again. The legend of the vanishing girl is something that Bolster has sewn, using the most minute stitching, deep into the narrative fabric of the collection. One realizes that Vermeer, and the emblematic vocabulary provided by his paintings, has permitted Bolster to discreetly evoke the more obvious implications of her mourning. In other words, if Bolster has austerely decided to deny herself certain options of phrasemaking, it is only to more resourcefully press specific ideas into unspoken expression; and this bid to find a new, different logic for bereavement has shaped the book in complex and surprising ways. Bolster’s minimalist, abbreviated, subliminal “pavilioning” of Brebner and Anya’s deaths may take some getting used to, but the enterprising brevity of the writing – where all the tiny unsentimental surges of regret flourish into a work of considerable sophistication – may make Pavilion one of the most talked-about collections of the year. “The newly dead,” writes Bolster, “must choose a memory to live in for eternity.” By such painstaking subtleties of detail and suggestion has Bolster built her version of the afterlife. mRb
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