Image of car sinking (University of Manitoba)‘Reality Check’ and Other Poetry by C.B. Anderson The Society March 23, 2023 Love Poems, Poetry, Satire 12 Comments . Reality Check __The bars we frequent have been raised too high, Not calibrated to the greatest common factor: __The will to let things slide. Who can deny This, save for someone who is such a polished actor __That he or she can lie without a quiver Of lip or chin? It’s one thing being shit-face drunk, __But driving innocents into a river Is something else again. The station wagon sunk __In seconds, disappearing out of sight Before our very eyes. The air was turning chilly __As day gave way before the coming night; Attempts to counter gravity seemed just as silly __As rafts of fresh complaints from wealthy tourists Intent on staking out a new vacation spot, __Who hire the services of able jurists When short of level banks on which to pitch a cot. __And meanwhile, water filled the straining lungs Of victims much too young to vote or ever matter, __Frail climbers on survival’s bottom rungs. If sink or swim’s the only choice, let’s choose the latter. . . The Hunt The hounds are at my heels—so close, I feel their breath condensing on my woolen socks, the very ones she gave to me. I’d kneel to pray, except that flinty broken rocks lie underfoot. She didn’t mean for me to run, but nonetheless her thoughtful gift ensured there’d be that possibility, and I would thank her now but for the rift that out of nowhere opened up between us and sent me running off into the night, Oh, look! The evening star ahead is Venus, I’m pretty sure, and what a winsome sight the goddess is, despite the raft of trouble incited by the steam of sudden love, a love now ruptured like a floating bubble too frail to stand the lash of twigs above the playground. Hounds don’t mind a bit of mud; it makes the trailing simpler. Neither do they shy from danger or the scent of blood: While puppies being trained to hunt, they grew quite fond of primal triggers set to spur adrenaline. Though I could say the same for me, how different it must be for her, the woman poised to share my family name. I tell myself again, lest I forget it: schemes o’ mice an’ men gang aft a-gley, as true tonight as when that Scot first said it long ago. To keep the hounds at bay is not the hardest task. More difficult by far is facing wolves that lie in wait ahead, disposed to mount a swift assault on curs who’ve let themselves tergiversate. And yes, I know how easy it will be for them to slay me when I finally say, “And now I lay me down to sleep ….” My plea, with luck, should buy me time to slip away. . . C.B. Anderson was the longtime gardener for the PBS television series, The Victory Garden. Hundreds of his poems have appeared in scores of print and electronic journals out of North America, Great Britain, Ireland, Austria, Australia and India. His collection, Mortal Soup and the Blue Yonder was published in 2013 by White Violet Press. NOTE TO READERS: If you enjoyed this poem or other content, please consider making a donation to the Society of Classical Poets. The Society of Classical Poets does not endorse any views expressed in individual poems or commentary. 12 Responses Roy Eugene Peterson March 23, 2023 I take “Reality Check” as an event that actually happened. I do hope they were able to swim out of there. I felt “The Hunt” was in a dream. I did a learn a new word: To “tergiversate” is to vacillate or equivocate. The quote from Burns is well placed. Reply C.B. Anderson March 23, 2023 The particular event of which I am aware, Roy, took place somewhere down south some ten or fifteen years ago. My memory of it is sketchy, but I think the mother might have survived. I think she had three children with her. I agree that “The Hunt” is somewhat dreamlike, or at least a fugue state driven by a bad conscience. Reply Joseph S. Salemi March 23, 2023 Notice in “The Hunt” that Anderson links the first six quatrains by enjambing the fourth line of each to the first line of the quatrain that follows. This makes for a very smooth narrative flow. He does the same in the first four quatrains of “Reality Check,” but here the alternation between iambic 5s and alexandrines hobbles the flow deliberately, because the subject matter requires it. The accidental drowning of children is too somber to be given in an easy read. Once again, I’m amazed at how Evan manages to find the perfect illustration for a posting. Reply C.B. Anderson March 23, 2023 As you well know, Joseph, once a poem, ab initio, embarks on a set course, the following lines and stanzas are made to measure — they are, as it were, bespoke. The enjambments etc. that you note are more or less accidental, but I cannot not take credit for them. It all comes under the rubric of fooling around with words. Without words, where would any of us be? Reply Jeff Eardley March 24, 2023 CB, there is a poignancy in “Reality check” particularly the final stanza. Like Roy, “tergiversate”;sent me to the dictionary. “The Hunt”is blessed with lots of subtle imagery that makes for repeat readings. These are both very good. Thank you. Reply C.B. Anderson March 24, 2023 I thank you, Jeff, but keep your dictionary handy, for you will need it again someday. Reply Brian A Yapko March 24, 2023 Wow, C.B., “Reality Check” is as powerful a poem as I can recall reading. You propel this narrative forward with enjambment that has the force and effect of a speeding train. What’s really effective is the way you use polished, carefully controlled language as the narrative voice for much of the poem but then punch out of it with a harsh term like “shit-faced drunk” or deep disdain with the “wealthy tourists” and their “able jurists” all contrasted with the pathos of those “frail climbers on survival’s bottom’s lowest rungs.” This is a poem which demands that the reader make moral choices which are more complex than “sink or swim.” “The Hunt’ is a wonderfully-wrought poem also propelled by enjambment with even greater momentum than “Reality Check” – which is perfect for a “chase” poem in which the speaker can scarcely afford to stop to catch his breath. “Tergiversate” is surely the obscure word of the day but it, combined with the Burns quote, tell us much about a speaker who is obviously well-bred, educated, clever, terrified and slippery. One wonders what “rift”with his bride-to-be could have made the speaker turn tail and run? It’s also fun to see the hounds on the hunt but with the speaker self-described as a “cur” and facing more terrifying canines: wolves, who I assume are his disappointed intended’s family? The setting, the language (e.g. “hounds” rather than dogs) the quaintness of a broken engagement causing such drama — it feels 19th Century to me and it feels like an English countryside. I’d love to get your clarification on setting. As far as what happens in the last stanza… there’s a cliffhanger here. I’d like to know what happens next! Reply C.B Anderson March 24, 2023 I thank you, Brian, but you raise questions to which I have no good answers. For the setting, hounds are used in certain parts of the U.S. just as much as, if not more than, they are in England. When I lived in Arizona, on the Blue River, my next-door neighbors were world-famous hunters and guides, Clell and Dale Lee by name. Such hunts may happen anywhere. The wolves at the end might simply have been wolves. The poem itself is not of recent vintage, but I suspect that the hounds were figments of a bad conscience. I don’t know whether you have ever been beset with guilt and shame, but I can tell you that it’s not a pretty thing. I, too, would like to know what happened next, but I haven’t been given the details, so maybe I will just have to slip away. Reply Shaun C. Duncan March 26, 2023 I’m a great fan of your work, C.B. and I think “Reality Check” is probably my favourite piece of yours that I’ve read. I initially thought I was in for something lighter in tone, so when the station wagon sank it was like a sudden cold shower. It put me in mind of the Susan Smith case from the mid-90s and another almost identical incident which happened here in Australia a few years back. “Hounds” is excellent as well, but I think I need a little more time to recover before I give that one a close reading. Reply C.B. Anderson March 27, 2023 I’ve been told, Shaun, that cold showers are good for us (if we can bear them). I’m glad you like what I do. Reply Margaret Coats March 27, 2023 In agreement with Joseph Salemi (that the drowning of children is too somber), I take “Reality Check” as a surreal poem. “The Hunt” may be real, but presented in such a symbolic manner that I slip away from it more easily. Hope that is your intent, C. B.! Reply C.B. Anderson March 27, 2023 Surreal? I guess so. Part of this might be due to the fact that I tend to wander off point while trying to fulfill the demands of the form. I think “The Hunt” is fairly surreal as well. Symbols are usually better than cymbals. Reply Leave a Reply Cancel ReplyYour email address will not be published.CommentName* Email* Website Δ This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Roy Eugene Peterson March 23, 2023 I take “Reality Check” as an event that actually happened. I do hope they were able to swim out of there. I felt “The Hunt” was in a dream. I did a learn a new word: To “tergiversate” is to vacillate or equivocate. The quote from Burns is well placed. Reply
C.B. Anderson March 23, 2023 The particular event of which I am aware, Roy, took place somewhere down south some ten or fifteen years ago. My memory of it is sketchy, but I think the mother might have survived. I think she had three children with her. I agree that “The Hunt” is somewhat dreamlike, or at least a fugue state driven by a bad conscience. Reply
Joseph S. Salemi March 23, 2023 Notice in “The Hunt” that Anderson links the first six quatrains by enjambing the fourth line of each to the first line of the quatrain that follows. This makes for a very smooth narrative flow. He does the same in the first four quatrains of “Reality Check,” but here the alternation between iambic 5s and alexandrines hobbles the flow deliberately, because the subject matter requires it. The accidental drowning of children is too somber to be given in an easy read. Once again, I’m amazed at how Evan manages to find the perfect illustration for a posting. Reply
C.B. Anderson March 23, 2023 As you well know, Joseph, once a poem, ab initio, embarks on a set course, the following lines and stanzas are made to measure — they are, as it were, bespoke. The enjambments etc. that you note are more or less accidental, but I cannot not take credit for them. It all comes under the rubric of fooling around with words. Without words, where would any of us be? Reply
Jeff Eardley March 24, 2023 CB, there is a poignancy in “Reality check” particularly the final stanza. Like Roy, “tergiversate”;sent me to the dictionary. “The Hunt”is blessed with lots of subtle imagery that makes for repeat readings. These are both very good. Thank you. Reply
C.B. Anderson March 24, 2023 I thank you, Jeff, but keep your dictionary handy, for you will need it again someday. Reply
Brian A Yapko March 24, 2023 Wow, C.B., “Reality Check” is as powerful a poem as I can recall reading. You propel this narrative forward with enjambment that has the force and effect of a speeding train. What’s really effective is the way you use polished, carefully controlled language as the narrative voice for much of the poem but then punch out of it with a harsh term like “shit-faced drunk” or deep disdain with the “wealthy tourists” and their “able jurists” all contrasted with the pathos of those “frail climbers on survival’s bottom’s lowest rungs.” This is a poem which demands that the reader make moral choices which are more complex than “sink or swim.” “The Hunt’ is a wonderfully-wrought poem also propelled by enjambment with even greater momentum than “Reality Check” – which is perfect for a “chase” poem in which the speaker can scarcely afford to stop to catch his breath. “Tergiversate” is surely the obscure word of the day but it, combined with the Burns quote, tell us much about a speaker who is obviously well-bred, educated, clever, terrified and slippery. One wonders what “rift”with his bride-to-be could have made the speaker turn tail and run? It’s also fun to see the hounds on the hunt but with the speaker self-described as a “cur” and facing more terrifying canines: wolves, who I assume are his disappointed intended’s family? The setting, the language (e.g. “hounds” rather than dogs) the quaintness of a broken engagement causing such drama — it feels 19th Century to me and it feels like an English countryside. I’d love to get your clarification on setting. As far as what happens in the last stanza… there’s a cliffhanger here. I’d like to know what happens next! Reply
C.B Anderson March 24, 2023 I thank you, Brian, but you raise questions to which I have no good answers. For the setting, hounds are used in certain parts of the U.S. just as much as, if not more than, they are in England. When I lived in Arizona, on the Blue River, my next-door neighbors were world-famous hunters and guides, Clell and Dale Lee by name. Such hunts may happen anywhere. The wolves at the end might simply have been wolves. The poem itself is not of recent vintage, but I suspect that the hounds were figments of a bad conscience. I don’t know whether you have ever been beset with guilt and shame, but I can tell you that it’s not a pretty thing. I, too, would like to know what happened next, but I haven’t been given the details, so maybe I will just have to slip away. Reply
Shaun C. Duncan March 26, 2023 I’m a great fan of your work, C.B. and I think “Reality Check” is probably my favourite piece of yours that I’ve read. I initially thought I was in for something lighter in tone, so when the station wagon sank it was like a sudden cold shower. It put me in mind of the Susan Smith case from the mid-90s and another almost identical incident which happened here in Australia a few years back. “Hounds” is excellent as well, but I think I need a little more time to recover before I give that one a close reading. Reply
C.B. Anderson March 27, 2023 I’ve been told, Shaun, that cold showers are good for us (if we can bear them). I’m glad you like what I do. Reply
Margaret Coats March 27, 2023 In agreement with Joseph Salemi (that the drowning of children is too somber), I take “Reality Check” as a surreal poem. “The Hunt” may be real, but presented in such a symbolic manner that I slip away from it more easily. Hope that is your intent, C. B.! Reply
C.B. Anderson March 27, 2023 Surreal? I guess so. Part of this might be due to the fact that I tend to wander off point while trying to fulfill the demands of the form. I think “The Hunt” is fairly surreal as well. Symbols are usually better than cymbals. Reply