This book
represents 52 years of serious work by a poet of great skill and sensibility. Barry
Tebb believes in the importance of his art in an age when cynical detachment is
the requisite posture for a reputation, at least in the creative alleyways
where I’ve made camp (more by accident than design). Elsewhere, it’s enough
just to write increasingly insipid imitations of the generation that came
before you these days. Maybe the readership no longer believes in poetry as a high
and possibly holy work either:
Armitage, I name you, a blackguard and a knave,
Who knows no more of poetry than McGonagall the brave,
Yet tops the list of Faber’s ‘Best Poets of Our Age’.
Barry Tebb ‘James Simmons R.I.P.’
That’s from
Barry’s poem ‘James Simmons R.I.P.’ It’s one of the great pieces in this
collection, a paean to a poet largely erased from the histories because his
style had become unfashionable and his personality difficult. Armitage
challenges nobody; his demeanour and his poetry are radio friendly. The job of
poets in the mainstream now isn’t to make the reader look up a reference or be truly
and genuinely moved.
The only
Simmons poem I have been able to find is about two people having sex on a
train. It’s rambunctious and very funny. But Barry says of Simmons ‘You bared
your soul in a most unfashionable way.’ This is something Barry’s own poetry
does too (and mine, perhaps). We learn, reading from cover to cover as I have
done, about his relationship with Brenda Williams, a poet of considerable gifts
herself and one who, one day, absolutely must be ‘discovered’ by feminist scholars – if this
doesn’t happen, there is no justice:
I remember the bungalow at Rawdon
Where we met, burning coals could never warm it,
Living there alone was like wearing a hair shirt.
I had reached the end of childhood, the part
With jelly, ludo and Rupert Bear. You came
With a friend who announced, ‘There’s no one here
Who’s not neurotic.
Barry Tebb ‘Cut Flowers’
The lives of
these two extraordinary poets were as filled with love, sadness, tragedy, waste
and beauty as all of our lives, I would imagine. But despite their problems,
despite what might be called (though the term is perhaps uninformed) the
failure of their marriage, Barry and Brenda remained intensely close, their
lives interwoven, and when Brenda died, the poetry Barry wrote is heartbreaking
and beautiful. Why such sincerity is no longer valued puzzles and annoys me. Reading
his poem ‘Your Dying’ I feel my mother’s end beating hard in my chest:
You were strapped down and I strapped up, too far
To grasp your desperate hand. For once your terror was plain,
You’d never come home to your eight cats again.
Barry Tebb ‘Your Dying’
The centrepiece
of these ‘Collected Poems’ is ‘Bridge Over the Aire’, an epic, 82-page, five
book poem about Leeds and first love. Barry was born in Leeds, a Leeds he returns
to as we all go home; but little of his Leeds remains:
My eyes wandered over the Aire at the
Coal barges as they snaked beneath the bridge
In black tarpaulin shrouds and clouds of steam
Hissed from Easy Road Laundry
Barry Tebb ‘Bridge Over the Aire, Book One’
In crisis,
perhaps, facing misfortune (‘Luck, where did I leave you?’) Barry walks
the streets of his youth, those that remain, reconsidering his own choices (‘I
own no property but a book’); and the past and the present accompany him
wherever he goes:
With every car alarm
I hear the air raid
Siren’s song, Waterloo Road’s
Bomb hole big enough to hold
A bus that could not stop
Barry Tebb ‘Bridge Over the Aire, Book One’
But most of
all, on Barry’s journey home, he thinks of Margaret, his first love:
Why does your image haunt me
Night and day?
Lank February grass
Pale lemon straw
The colour of your hair
Your voice in dreams
“I am here, I am waiting.”
Barry Tebb, ‘Bridge Over the Aire, Book One’
The whole
poem is haunting, filled with nostalgia and its attendant sense of desperate
loss; it is also romantic, enormously so, in a way that no poet who wishes to
be considered sophisticated would dare to be anymore. But those who practice a
distant art, a carefully neutral or emotionally superficial art are lying to us
about human experience. Life is as lovely as it is raw and terrible. In the midst of the beauty and the chaos we have poetry, which is flexible enough to glorify the magic and make at least partial sense of our despair. If it doesn’t speak to the core of
our being about the things that frighten us, sadden us and ennoble us then it’s
really no more important than balloon twisting at a children’s party.
We are standing on the corner of Falmouth Place
We are standing by the steps to the Aire
We are standing outside the Maypole
Falling into Eden.
Barry Tebb, ‘Bridge Over the Aire, Book Five’
Published by Sixties Press, 2016
ISBN: 978-1-905554-31-7