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Persephone Hears a Layered Singing |
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Issue 17 Summer 2011
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by Susan McCaslin
Flanked by milling shoppers jockeying for positions in line ups, I walk through a labyrinthine, underground mall, past elegant makeup counters, robotic joggers, into rooms of stockpiled merchandise, oil tanks, missiles, endless silent hallways that open at last on a corn-yellow room where light streams from a skylight on the braided head of a woman playing a grand piano and singing. She is not young or old, familiar or unfamiliar, but has the timbre of one who had been my mother, one long thought dead. And what a voice, as of all octaves slung together, an Ella voice, a rich contralto hymning “Summertime,” voice broken and repaired in each measure, voice beyond control and controlling voice of longing and release voice of resisting and yielding, voice making no division between upper and lower worlds, liminal, liberating voice without score no ulterior motive but to sing the song which is the world in all its rich atonalities, lifts and falls. (For if one can so sing, anything may be possible.) So this is how I come to the upper world, not shoving one foot before the other, but remaining where I am and rising on a voice. Often now, I am in the deep underground and simultaneously above, being both spring and winter, all seasons rotating together. |
Susan McCaslin |
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| Susan McCaslin is a poet, Faculty Emerita of Douglas College in New Westminster, BC, scholar, workshop facilitator, and author of eleven volumes of poetry, including her most recent, Demeter Goes Skydiving (University of Alberta Press, 2011). She has edited two anthologies of poetry (Poetry and Spiritual Practice and A Matter of Spirit) and is on the editorial board of Event: the Douglas College Review. Susan lives in Fort Langley, British Columbia. After twenty-three years as a professor of English and Creative Writing at Douglas College in New Westminster, B.C., Susan is now a full-time writer, giving poetry workshops, talks, and readings. www.susanmccaslin.ca | |