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    Circle Game


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      the circle game

      the circle game

      margaret atwood

      INTRODUCTION BY

      Sherrill grace

      Copyright © 1966, 1998 by Margaret Atwood

      Introduction copyright © 1978, 1998 by House of Anansi Press

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

      Published by

      House of Anansi Press Inc.

      110 Spadina Ave., Suite 801

      Toronto, ON, M5V 2K4

      Tel. 416-363-4343

      Fax 416-363-1017

      www.anansi.ca

      Distributed in Canada by

      Publishers Group Canada

      250A Carlton Street

      Toronto, ON, M5A 2L1

      Tel. 416-934-9900

      Toll free order numbers:

      Tel. 800-663-5714

      Fax 800-565-3770

      06 05 04 03 02 2 3 4 5

      NATIONAL LIBRARY OF CANADA CATALOGUING IN PUBLICATION DATA

      Atwood, Margaret, 1939–

      The circle game

      Poems.

      ISBN 0-88784-629-7

      I. Title.

      PS8501.T86C57 1998 C811’.54 C98-931443-X

      PR9199.3.A78C57 1998

      The sequence The Circle Game first appeared as a series of lithographs by Charles Pachter. Some of the other poems first appeared in Alaska Review, The Canadian Forum, Edge, English, Evidence, Kayak, Prism International, and Queen’s Quarterly.

      Cover Design: Bill Douglas at The Bang

      Typesetting: ECW Type & Art, Oakville

      Printed and Bound in Canada

      We acknowledge for their financial support of our publishing program the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, and the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP).

      For J.

      CONTENTS

      Introduction by Sherrill Grace

      This Is a Photograph of Me

      After the Flood, We

      A Messenger

      Evening Trainstation, Before Departure

      An Attempted Solution for Chess Problems

      In My Ravines

      A Descent Through the Carpet

      Playing Cards

      Man with a Hook

      The City Planners

      On the Streets, Love

      Eventual Proteus

      A Meal

      The Circle Game

      Camera

      Winter Sleepers

      Spring in the Igloo

      A Sibyl

      Migration: C.P.R.

      Journey to the Interior

      Some Objects of Wood and Stone

      Pre-Amphibian

      Against Still Life

      The Islands

      Letters, Towards and Away

      A Place: Fragments

      The Explorers

      The Settlers

      INTRODUCTION

      by Sherrill Grace

      Margaret Atwood’s first major book of poetry, The Circle Game, won her the Governor General’s Award for 1966, and in many other ways announced her arrival as an important contemporary poet. The title poem first appeared in a limited folio edition in 1965, designed, illustrated, and printed by Charles Pachter. Contact Press then published the entire collection in 1966, but this edition quickly went out of print and a new one was published the following year by House of Anansi Press. In her Selected Poems (1976), Margaret Atwood included fewer than half of the poems that appear in the original Circle Game, and hence the reader of the Selected has only a limited sense of the book as a unified whole. This Anansi reprinting, then, is especially welcome, for it indicates the lasting importance of the collection and provides an opportunity to reconsider the first major work of one of our finest writers.

      Upon publication, the book was generally wellreceived and most reviewers recognized the appearance of an authentic and distinctive voice. However, certain fallacies which have always plagued the understanding of Atwood’s work arose in these early reviews: she was labelled an autobiographical writer in the narrowest sense and as a “mythopoeic poet” who followed the precepts of the so-called Frye school. Further misreading of her work was to come later with the publication of The Journals of Susanna Moodie (1970), Power Politics (1971), and Survival (1972), and her adoption by American feminists and Canadian nationalists.

      If one compares Atwood’s earlier poems — those published in Alphabet or in her first chapbook, Double Persephone, for example — with the poems in The Circle Game, one is struck by The Circle Game’s maturity, its new assurance of voice, form, and approach. The acerbic wit, the cool detachment, and the authority and control, now recognized as integral to the Atwood voice, are present in The Circle Game, as well as the distinctive aural-visual dynamic of the style, and Atwood’s intense preoccupation with the double aspect of life. Also characteristic is the spareness of the punctuation (except for parentheses), the controlled patterning of the lines and section breaks. Thematically, Atwood here explores many of the concerns that have continued to intrigue her — the traps of reality, myth, language, and the pernicious roles we play, the cage of the self, and above all, the nature of human perception.

      Although one must be wary of forcing too rigid an order upon the poems, the arrangement of The Circle Game does suggest a definite pattern. The opening poems present a variety of circle games within which the speaker struggles for an escape. The growing sense of defeat and impasse climaxes in the title poem, “The Circle Game,’ when the speaker realizes that she wants to break the circle. Several poems follow in which the speaker tries various escape-routes, until a sense of equilibrium is attained in the final three poems. This balance occurs, in part, through the development of both the reader’s and the speaker’s perception. The opening poem, “This Is a Photograph of Me,” challenges our perception immediately, asking us to adjust our sights, to find out where this particular voice is coming from. If we can learn how to do this, the voice promises us that “eventually/you will be able to see me.” The ironic double structure of this poem, its emphasis on seeing, and its sharp visual imagery urges us to rediscover our senses and our relationship with the world.

      The title poem portrays the danger of misperceiving the roles we assume and the games we play in our personal relations. Images of rooms, mirrors, and circles create the sense of claustrophobic entrapment:

      Being with you

      here, in this room

      is like groping through a mirror

      whose glass has melted

      to the consistency

      of gelatin

      You refuse to be

      (and I)

      an exact reflection, yet

      will not walk from the glass,

      be separate.

      Underlying this apparent impasse is the perception that the alteration of things will be destructive for both partners: the speaker is “transfixed/by your eyes’/ cold blue thumbtacks”. But she also knows that “there is no joy” in the game, and that she wants “the circle/ broken”, regardless of the cost.

      Most of the poems in the collection focus upon the tension between opposites, whether male/female, order / chaos, day/night, rooms/open spaces, or the larger polarities of stasis and movement, self and other. “Journey to the Interior” explores the labyrinth of the self. It is as if the speaker in the earlier poems, having found escape from circle games impossible, has withdrawn into the self only to discover that she is enclosed in the final, most dangerous circle: “it is easier for me to lose my way/forever here, than in other landscapes”. The alternative is to abandon the egocentric self. I
    n “Journey to the Interior,” Atwood expands the self-as-landscape metaphor, introduced in “This Is a Photograph of Me” and appearing again in the final poems of the book, because to see the self as other, as landscape, is a possible way out of the circle.

      Another path to freedom, in “Pre-Amphibian,” is sleep, where one is

      released

      from the lucidities of day

      when you are something I can

      trace a line around …

      But this release is short-lived. We wake soon “with sunlight steaming merciless on the shores of morning”. In “Some Objects of Wood and Stone,” the speaker finds concrete comfort in physical objects, pebbles, and carvings. Through these objects, “single and/solid and rounded and really / there”, she is able to bypass the treachery of words and the limitations of sight. In “Against Still Life,” as the title implies, the speaker is determined to crack silences and force life to unfold its meaning.

      Release from circle games, tentative and rudimentary though it is, occurs in the last three poems. In “A Place: Fragments,” the speaker realizes that meaning does exist, not in opposition to “this confusion, this largeness/ and dissolving:/… but one/with it”. “The Explorers” and “The Settlers” depict life pared down to the essentials of bones and salt seas. Perhaps the deaths described in “The Explorers” are both necessary and propitious. At least they point forward to the harmony of “The Settlers,” where “our inarticulate/skeleton” is no longer “two skeletons”, but intermixed and one. The speaking voice in both these poems is neither trapped within circles nor immobilized by antinomies. This voice recalls the speaker in “This Is a Photograph of Me,’ in that it comes from beyond the circle of self and is “one with” the land. Consequently, the final lines of “The Settlers” are both beautiful and reassuring:

      Now horses graze

      inside this fence of ribs, and

      children run, with green

      smiles, (not knowing

      where) across

      the fields of our open hands.

      These simple images of happy children at one with nature offer an alternative vision to the earlier traps of self and reason.

      In The Circle Game, Margaret Atwood explores the fallibility of human perception and the concomitant dangers of the egocentric self. Whether in our use of language, our relationships with others, or our understanding of history and place, we distort and delimit life; our eyes are “cold blue thumbtacks”, our love affairs are joyless circle games, our words are barriers, and our cities are straight lines restraining panic. Freedom, these poems proclaim, is both necessary and dangerous. Consolation is possible via touch and physical objects, but in order to find that “place of absolute/ unformed beginning” for which the speaker longs in “Migration: C.P.R.,” we must return ourselves to fragments, bones, and salt seas.

      The sense of negation in the last poems, however, cannot be mistaken for nihilism. The reduction of self to its elements bears no relation to the tense weariness in “Eventual Proteus” where the lovers are little more than “voices/ abraded with fatigue”. In terms of voice, image, even form, The Circle Game ends by answering the challenge of “This Is a Photograph of Me.” There the speaker promised that if we looked long enough we could see her. In “A Place: Fragments,” we are told that eyesight is insufficient, that “An other sense tugs at us”. The alternative to circle games is

      something not lost or hidden

      but just not found yet

      that informs, holds together

      this confusion, this largeness

      and dissolving:

      not above or behind

      or within it, but one

      with it: an

      identity:

      something too huge and simple

      for us to see.

      Sherrill Grace is the head of the English Department at the University of British Columbia. She teaches modern and Canadian literature, and specializes in Canadian Cultural Studies. She has written widely on Margaret Atwood.

      the circle game

      This Is a Photograph of Me

      It was taken some time ago.

      At first it seems to be

      a smeared

      print: blurred lines and grey flecks

      blended with the paper;

      then, as you scan

      it, you see in the left-hand corner

      a thing that is like a branch: part of a tree

      (balsam or spruce) emerging

      and, to the right, halfway up

      what ought to be a gentle

      slope, a small frame house.

      In the background there is a lake,

      and beyond that, some low hills.

      (The photograph was taken

      the day after I drowned.

      I am in the lake, in the centre

      of the picture, just under the surface.

      It is difficult to say where

      precisely, or to say

      how large or small I am:

      the effect of water

      on light is a distortion

      but if you look long enough,

      eventually

      you will be able to see me.)

      After the Flood, We

      We must be the only ones

      left, in the mist that has risen

      everywhere as well

      as in these woods

      I walk across the bridge

      towards the safety of high ground

      (the tops of the trees are like islands)

      gathering the sunken

      bones of the drowned mothers

      (hard and round in my hands)

      while the white mist washes

      around my legs like water;

      fish must be swimming

      down in the forest beneath us,

      like birds, from tree to tree

      and a mile away

      the city, wide and silent,

      is lying lost, far undersea.

      You saunter beside me, talking

      of the beauty of the morning,

      not even knowing

      that there has been a flood,

      tossing small pebbles

      at random over your shoulder

      into the deep thick air,

      not hearing the first stumbling

      footsteps of the almost-born

      coming (slowly) behind us,

      not seeing

      the almost-human

      brutal faces forming

      (slowly)

      out of stone.

      A Messenger

      The man came from nowhere

      and is going nowhere

      one day he suddenly appeared

      outside my window

      suspended in the air

      between the ground and the tree bough

      I once thought all encounters

      were planned:

      newspaper boys passing

      in the street, with cryptic

      headlines, waitresses and their coded

      menus, women standing in streetcars

      with secret packages, were sent to

      me. And gave some time

      to their deciphering

      but this one is clearly

      accidental; clearly this one is

      no green angel, simple black and white

      fiend; no ordained

      messenger; merely

      a random face

      revolving outside the window

      and if no evident abstract

      significance, then

      something as contingent

      as a candidate for marriage

      in this district of exacting neighbours:

      not meant for me personally

      but generic: to be considered

      from all angles (origin; occupation;

      aim in life); identification

      papers examined; if appropriate,

      conversed with; when

      he can be made to descend.

      Meanwhile, I wonder

      which of the green or

      black and white


      myths he swallowed by mistake

      is feeding on him like a tapeworm

      has raised him from the ground

      and brought him to this window

      swivelling from some invisible rope

      his particular features

      fading day by day

      his eyes melted

      first; Thursday

      his flesh became translucent

      shouting at me

      (specific) me

      desperate messages with his

      obliterated mouth

      in a silent language

      Evening Trainstation, Before Departure

      It seems I am always

      moving

      (and behind me the lady

      slumped in darkness

      on a wooden bench

      in the park, thinking

      of nothing: the screams

      of the children

      going down the slide

      behind her, topple her mind

      into deep trenches)

      moving

      (and in front of me the man

      standing in a white room

      three flights up, a razor

      (or is the evening

      a razor) poised in his hand

      considering

      what it is for)

      move with me.

      Here I am in

      a pause in space

      hunched on the edge

      of a tense suitcase

      (in which there is a gathering

      of soiled clothing, plastic bottles,

      scissors, barbed wire

      and a lady

      and a man)

      In a minute everything will begin

      to move: the man

      will tumble from the room, the lady

      will take the razor in her black-gloved hand

      and I will get on the train

      and move elsewhere once more.

      At the last station

      under the electric clock

      there was a poster: Where?

      part of some obscure campaign;

      at this one there is a loudspeaker

      that calls the names and places

     


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