{"id":76,"date":"2012-02-11T11:36:21","date_gmt":"2012-02-11T11:36:21","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/ink.verticalplus.co.uk\/archive\/?p=76"},"modified":"2020-12-09T14:36:58","modified_gmt":"2020-12-09T14:36:58","slug":"ken-head-reviews-martyn-crucefixs-hurt","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/inksweatandtears.co.uk\/archive\/ken-head-reviews-martyn-crucefixs-hurt\/","title":{"rendered":"Ken Head reviews Martyn Crucefix&#39;s &#39;Hurt&#39;"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><font size=\"2\"><span style=\"font-style: italic; font-weight: bold; font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\">Hurt<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: bold; font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\">&nbsp; by <\/span><a style=\"font-weight: bold; font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\" href=\"http:\/\/www.poetrypf.co.uk\/martyncrucefixbiog.html\">Martyn Crucefix<\/a><span style=\"font-weight: bold; font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"> <\/span><a style=\"font-weight: bold; font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\" href=\"http:\/\/www.enitharmon.co.uk\/pages\/authors\/author_details.asp?AuthorID=1\">Enitharmon Press<\/a><span style=\"font-weight: bold; font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"> ISBN:&nbsp; 978-1-904634-97-3 \u00a39.99 114pp<\/span><br style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><br style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><span style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\">From first to last, Martyn Crucefix\u2019s impressive fifth collection offers writing of quality and worth.&nbsp; Arranged in three sections, its fifty-one thematically and stylistically varied poems nevertheless achieve a telling unity in both the seriousness of their subject matter and the poet\u2019s exact and detailed observation of it.&nbsp; In part one, pointedly sub-titled <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">At the cross-hairs<\/span>, there are, for example, nine poems whose focus is intricate, intimate and personal, together with a single poem in seven substantial parts entitled <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">More than it comes to<\/span>, as fine and moving a response to the tragically perennial human activity of warfare as I have read.&nbsp; As the title of the collection suggests, the poems in this section focus less on the comfortable areas of human life, than on those into which, sometimes painfully, sometimes joyously, complex intensities of feeling and experience force their way.&nbsp; Invocation, the opening poem, makes this challenge immediately clear by placing, &#8230; t<span style=\"font-style: italic;\">he blood-spill of hurt \/ that opens flesh and bone immediately alongside, &#8230; you wiping love from between your legs and &#8230; when old habits, uncertain eyes give out, \/ when it\u2019s dark wherever they put the light, \/ &#8230; cover him, cover him, cover his face. &nbsp;<\/span><\/span><br style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><br style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><span style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\">Whereas these first poems are tightly wrought, short-lined, sometimes elliptical and metaphorically complex, the <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">seven poems<\/span> <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">from the American War<\/span> which follow (and which bring to mind Walt Whitman\u2019s <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Leaves Of Grass<\/span>) are in the long-lined, conversational, vernacular style of a young man writing home from the war to his mother:&nbsp; <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">I pick\u2019d up my pen &amp; wrote my mother, \/ That I knew how she suffered with the passing of these days.<\/span>&nbsp; As the writer\u2019s narration proceeds through descriptions of horror, &#8230; <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">at the foot of the tree a heap of amputated legs &amp; arms &amp; hands<\/span>, about which war has taught him more than he would choose to know, &#8230; <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Of the two officers, feet pinned to the ground by bayonets, \/ Of sharp blades stuck through them, they receiv\u2019d twenty thrusts<\/span>, we come to understand that the use of historical detail from the American Civil War serves as a running metaphor for the wider moral purpose of developing the poet\u2019s indictment of the inhumanity of all war:&nbsp; <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">And all of those brave men, they also are all boys. \/ I saw their naked limbs through the scurf of well-worn clothes, \/ &#8230; Such flesh as they had, I thought it glowed through their clothes. <\/span>&nbsp;<\/span><br style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><br style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><span style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\">Alongside the terrible inventory of slaughter in this poem, there is also much balancing witness to compassionate humanity, the superiority of individuals to the political and miltary machines that wreck their lives and of their care for each other in the darkest times:&nbsp;&nbsp; <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">I staid a long time at the bed-side of the young Baltimorean. \/ I staid certainly because death had mark\u2019d him and he was quite alone.<\/span>&nbsp; The narrator\u2019s voice is so clear, so present in the lines as to be at times overwhelming in its quiet acceptance.&nbsp; In the poem\u2019s final stanza, for example, with his own death imminent, he writes, for the last time, <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">To his own mother: \/ It is true, of course, that I am not well these days. \/ It is most likely hospital poison has penetrated my system. \/ But do not think of me this way, do not see your boy this way, \/ Remember me as I was and must surely be again.<\/span>&nbsp; Memory, remembrance.&nbsp; The words make it hard, for me impossible, not to be reminded of Remember, Christina Rossetti\u2019s great sonnet:&nbsp; <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Remember me when I am gone away, \/ Gone far away into the silent land.<\/span><\/span><br style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><br style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><span style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\">Parts two and three of the collection are equally emotionally charged, equally serious both in subject matter and tone.&nbsp; The introspective, even metaphysical, titles used throughout part two, <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Essays in island logic<\/span>, titles such as, <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">he considers the passage of time, he considers what the young have to teach and he considers the longevity of love,<\/span> all suggest as much, despite their marked contrast with the direct, graphic, contemporary titles used in part three, <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Riders on the storm:&nbsp; Tenby church acquarium, Emergency services, Scraps and Calling in the dark.<\/span>&nbsp; This last is a poem about the poet\u2019s elderly parents and, by implication, therefore, about the inevitability for all of us of becoming old.&nbsp; In some ways a simple description of the poet\u2019s mother\u2019s struggle with her mobile \u2019phone which, &#8230; <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">buried in her bag<\/span>, manages somehow to ring his number and so allows him to listen in on his mother\u2019s irritable tone as she speaks to his father, it expresses also the universally understood sorrow of a son who, looking on as his parents edge towards death, hopes <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">to be solicitous to the last<\/span>, but recognizes his helplessness:&nbsp; <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">It\u2019s painful to listen &#8230; Enough.&nbsp; I end the call.&nbsp; I cannot bear to pry \/ on what is coming closer \/ and will carry them away. &nbsp;<\/span><\/span><br style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><br style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><span style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><span style=\"font-style: italic;\">Hurt<\/span> investigates important questions, some merely difficult, others imponderable.&nbsp; In part one of Wilderness, for example, the meditative poem which, in seven sections, closes the book, Crucefix suggests, perhaps puzzlingly, that <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">the right and proper end \/ of all questioning is a cumulative sense of well-being,<\/span> that coming to grips with life\u2019s complexity rather than ignoring it, is, paradoxically, the means to being well.&nbsp; A difficult idea for societies dedicated to pleasurable amnesia, a life spent floating.&nbsp; Later, in part six, though, he uses the day-to-day changes in the appearance of the surface of a lake to enlarge the point.&nbsp; Some days, he says, <span style=\"font-style: italic;\">the murk \/ seems unfathomable, \/ a thing of gleams \/ and flashes \/ &#8230; of nothing that is clear at all, while at other times,&nbsp; it seems so beautiful \/ it leads us to hope \/ that it might allow us \/ no reason to flinch, \/ nor bully, nor brawl \/ but shift in the wind, \/ with the flood:&nbsp; try not \/ to hold on but let go.&nbsp; And we begin to understand.<\/span><\/span><br style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><br style=\"font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><\/font><\/p>\n<div style=\"text-align: right; font-family: Courier New,Courier,mono;\"><font size=\"2\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.kenhead.co.uk\/\">\u00a92011:&nbsp; Ken Head <br \/><\/a><\/font><\/div>\n<p><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Hurt&nbsp; by Martyn Crucefix Enitharmon Press ISBN:&nbsp; 978-1-904634-97-3 \u00a39.99 114ppFrom first to last, Martyn Crucefix\u2019s impressive fifth collection offers writing of quality and worth.&nbsp; Arranged in three sections, its fifty-one thematically and stylistically varied poems nevertheless achieve a telling unity in both the seriousness of their subject matter and the poet\u2019s exact and detailed observation [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[5],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-76","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-reviews"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/inksweatandtears.co.uk\/archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/76","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/inksweatandtears.co.uk\/archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/inksweatandtears.co.uk\/archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/inksweatandtears.co.uk\/archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/inksweatandtears.co.uk\/archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=76"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/inksweatandtears.co.uk\/archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/76\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":23754,"href":"https:\/\/inksweatandtears.co.uk\/archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/76\/revisions\/23754"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/inksweatandtears.co.uk\/archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=76"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/inksweatandtears.co.uk\/archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=76"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/inksweatandtears.co.uk\/archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=76"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}