A woman writer whom I follow on Twitter recently asked
for suggestions of Canadian women poets to include in her course syllabus for
the fall. I watched. I went off and put some chicken and potatoes in the stove
to roast for a quiet supper. I returned, looked at the feed again. I kept
giving it time, certain her name would emerge. There were so many good
suggestions by other women writers, but the name I was looking for—wondering
how it could be so easily forgotten—was that of Bronwen Wallace. I offered her
name, hoping someone new would come to her rich poetic work, as I had come to
her so many years before.
Bronwen Wallace died in 1989. She was too young. I
didn’t read her until I was in my mid-twenties, studying Canadian women poets
at Carleton University in Brenda Carr’s class. It was there that I came to
Bronwen Wallace for the first time. We read The
Stubborn Particulars of Grace (1985) and I found myself reconsidering what
it was that poetry could do, if you were a woman poet, and if you were trying
to figure out and define yourself. I learned that she wrote ‘narrative lyric’
and ‘meditative’ poems. What seemed to just be richly woven and detailed story
poems on the surface of things, were actually, on recurrent close readings,
much more powerful than I’d ever imagined as a young woman in my twenties.
Then, I called myself a feminist in theory, but I don’t know that I really knew
what it meant in practice. When I re-read the poems now, as a confident, strong
woman in my forties, they strike me in a different, sharper sort of way.
Wallace was a poet who rooted her work in the ordinary rhythms of women’s lives,
struggles, and friendships. She looked for what she called the ‘extraordinary’
in the patterns of what we think are our mundane, ‘ordinary’ lives and days.
One of my favourite poems of hers is “A Simple Poem
for Virginia Woolf.” In it, Wallace speaks of how she imagined that poem should
look in terms of both form and content:
I wanted it
simple
and perfect
roundhard as an
egg I thought
only once I’d said egg
I thought of the smell
of bacon grease and dirty frying pans
and whether there were enough for breakfast
I couldn’t help it
She didn’t want to have a poem rooted in the mundane parts of domestic life, of how women navigate their relationships with work, men, children, and even (shockingly!) potential lovers. The poem speaks of how she doesn’t want it to be confessional in tone, and how she doesn’t want people to figure out which parts are doorways and windows into a poet’s personal life. In the last stanza, she writes that what she only ever wanted, when she began writing with an intention, was just a simple poem of tribute for Virginia Woolf: “it wasn’t going to mention history/or choices or women’s lives/the complexities of women’s friendships/or the countless gritty details/of an ordinary woman’s life.” What she ending up writing instead, though, is a poem that finds its strength and glory in the stories of women who haven’t had a chance to write or speak them out loud. In the details, you see, she pointed to the issues that women were concerned with, and worried over, but never really dared to voice because of patriarchal intimidation.
Wallace saw poetry as being “nearer to prayers than
stories,” a belief that wove itself through all of her work. In her writing,
she offered women poets a way to mine their own personal experiences and lives.
She wrote of love, of caretaking (of husbands, children, and parents), illness,
abuse, and about how women create intricate networks of community in their closely
woven friendships. She wrote about common worries that most women deal with on
a daily basis. She wrote, too, about how women often feel they must give something
up to be in a relationship with a man.
In “The Woman in this Poem,” the focus is on a woman
who has an overly domesticated life, but who dreams of having an imagined lover
as an escape. She is tired of the monotony, of how she “begins/to chop the
onions for the pot-roast,” and how she fantasizes of escaping her
conservatively scripted marriage: “all
through dinner/her mouth will laugh and chatter/while she walks with her
lover/on a beach somewhere.” Wallace writes of women who give up their
independence and spirit for the sake of an old fashioned dream of what marriage
and family ought to look like, as scripted by 1950s Leave it to Beaver episodes
from America, and perhaps enforced by men with archaic views of feminism,
intimacy, partnership, and family. As she says, women readers of her poetry,
“like the woman in this poem/begin to feel/our own deaths/rising slow within
us.” What she does, as a poet, as a woman, is ask her readers (male and female)
to consider that they do not need to make themselves small in a relationship
just because those are traditional and conservative norms that have
historically been followed in western society. She speaks of diversity within
relationship, of being independent and joined collaboratively in a respectful
manner. She, back in the 1980s, pointed out that women should be free to be
independent and spirited within their
intimate and familial relationships. It shouldn’t be a sacrificial story.
This is what I love about Bronwen Wallace. As a strong,
single woman in my 40s, I know I won’t give something up in any intimate
relationship with a man. That requires a strong, independent, and confident
partner who doesn’t want to erase me bit by bit to bend to his view of what a
partnership should be. Wallace’s work rooted me in a feminism that didn’t
really mature until I was in my late 30s and early 40s. Thank God I read her
work in my twenties, but only understood it as a woman, and not as a girl. Her
lessons reverberate, and make me glad of my own narrative lyric and
confessional poetry. Her work inspires and speaks to me still.
Kim Fahner was the fourth poet
laureate of the City of Greater Sudbury (2016-18), and also the first woman to
be appointed to the role. Kim has published four volumes of poetry, including
her latest, Some Other Sky (Black Moss Press, 2017). Her play, Sparrows Over Slag, had a staged
reading at PlaySmelter New Work Theatre Festival (in collaboration with Pat the
Dog Theatre Creation), in May 2018 at the Sudbury Theatre Centre. She is
currently working on her second novel and completing a play-in-progress. She is
a member of the League of Canadian Poets, the Writers’ Union of Canada, and PEN
Canada. She blogs at The Republic of Poetry at kimfahner.wordpress.com. Her
website is www.kimfahner.com
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