FRESH VOICES: CAROL CASEY, MARY ANNE LONERGAN, DAVID YEREX WILLIAMSON
Welcome to the fourth edition of Fresh Voices, a project from and for the League’s associate members. The League’s associate members are talented poets who are writing and publishing poetry on their way to becoming established professional poets in the Canadian literary community. We are excited to be taking this opportunity to showcase the work of our associate members in this new series!
—
Each Home
by Carol CaseyEach home has its patchworks of light
and hints of warmth in the dark night-scape,
containers of pain and tarnished expectations,
imperfections, disappointments, unpardonable acts
and words that can never be taken back,
that moulder in the attics and basements,
haunt closets with tears,
sadness of the known that is not really
and every stranger that familiarity breeds,
that breathes and eats and sleeps, that is
whole and broken together within these walls
waiting for faces to form around the
ubiquitous entrapment of love so deep
it is often mistaken for everything else
under the sun.
Carol Casey been writing poetry since age 13 and never completely stopped, even though work, family responsibilities and general life calamities often and persistently took precedence over poetry promotion. Writing poetry has been a mainstay throughout her life, empowering and grounding her through many ups and downs. In 2005 she joined the Huron Poetry Collective, and remains an active participant. She also attends the Stratford Poet’s Workshop when possible. She has given numerous readings and her poetry has appeared in two chapbooks by the Huron Poetry Collective, “No Corners to Hide in” and “The Language of Dew and Sunsets; and in periodicals such as “The Leaf”, “Toward the Light” and “Tickled by Thunder”. She has also contributed to two anthologies about women and health care, “Women Who Care: Women’s Stories of Health Care and Caring” and “Much Madness, Divinest Sense: Women’s Stories of Mental Health and Health Care”. She is looking forward to entering more fully into the Canadian poetic conversation.
Deafness #1
by Mary Anne Lonergantribute to deaf and hearing impaired
What do we hear,
but a silent sound
of no voices,
no laughter or cries
but steady silences
What do we hear,
but feel the drumming rhythm
of our own heartbeats
floating, like waves
in and out of our minds
They say
silence is golden
but a long day and night,
of not hearing anything
Truth is,
silence is deafening
Deafness,
the enemy of all time
Not hearing a Masterpiece,
bird song, ocean waves
or the joyful sounds of singing
that we all take for granted
Deafness,
torment of a soul,
constantly fighting
This silent scream,
that wells up from the depth of our lungs
demanding to be heard and to hear
what the rest of the world is hearing!
All history is translated
by David Yerex Williamsoni
You remain one place long enough
your past may leave you for another
more suited to memoir –
. a song to follow
Drawn from earth surrendered
old mornings creep up trunks of ashes
shiver young hours out branches
. perch –
waiting to fasten to new stories
It was harvest when you first left home
the tick talks and tells you nothing.
Folded ghost
follow that old settler road
off the Yellowhead
to an almost town
where once your history lived –
behind fractured windows
toothless your grandfather’s house
cries for her scatterlings
. a season out of step
grass roots cling
shifting seeds drift
scrub trees take back ground lost
Wildflowers thinly dusted
fall fallow under hushed breezes
chunks of lives straying through ribbons of indigo
mingled in old letter words
. shared in time
each voice holding
in place – making There here
Time is a strange spider
eats the memory out of history
Today no earth remembers you
or itself
Excerpt from the long poem All history is translation
David Yerex Williamson is an educator, poet and public speaker living in Norway House, Manitoba, on the bank of the historic Nelson River. David has dabbled in theatre and poetry since the 1980s. His creative work has appeared in the Winnipeg Fringe Festival, Contemporary Verse 2, Aesthetica, Quint and, most recently, in the Winnipeg Free Press’ National Poetry Month feature in April, 2016. David is co-founder of the Boreal Writers Group, a collective of poets and lovers of poetry seeking to create a community across the boreal landscape. David can be reached at [email protected].
—
Curated by Lesley Strutt and Susan McMaster, these poems represent just a small portion of the great work being produced by our members, and we are excited to have this opportunity to share their poetry with you. If you are interested in contributing to Fresh Voices, please send 3-5 poems to [email protected]. You may submit only once per month, but you may submit every month until your poetry is selected. This opportunity is open only to associate members of the League–if you are interested in joining the League, please visit our membership page!