John Donlan's lyric work seeks the connection between lives -- not just the life of a coyote and the life of a man, or the peaceful cacophony of a pond in summer and the life of the human listener -- but between the life before birth, and the life after. He reveals the wilderness to us moment by moment, while simultaneously driving us back into our own nature -- a process readers, lifted by Donlan's imagery, rhythms, and insights, can only experience as pure pleasure. Here beauty is the engine that enspirits the mind, freeing us from contemporary despair and the illusion we've left nature behind.
Devil's Paintbrush
In my slow-burning archive orange hawkweed
thrives in granite-charactered soil
spalled off the basement stone,
a beaver labours up her steep skid road
logging poplar for food and shelter,
wind drives rivers of ripples down a pond.
Everything here knows what to do.
I investigate every valve, work and rework
notes to husks, skeletal remains,
survivors who revive experience.
I try to memorize, to make some pictures
to walk into, in the final time
when I can't walk or hear or see, and see
lake-cradling pink granite, its orange earth,
its skin of lives flickering, flickering.
" ... A fervent combination of soul-searching and nature appreciation. He may be treading a well-worn path, but he makes his own mark upon it."--Barbara Carey, The Toronto Star
" ... A keenly seasoned observer of our Ôvulnerable cathedral' ... metaphysically lush and metaphorically rich ... "--Judith Fitzgerald, The Globe and Mail
"I had the impression of a gifted outdoor sketcher working fast in failing light ... Donlan goes his own way, partly by adding personal experiences to this mix of woodland glimpses and self-examination, and partly by refusing to be cowed by the mea-culpa-chanting school of much recent nature poetry."--Peter Richardson, Arc Poetry Magazine