| A Hundred Mile Walk—Rik Wilkinson |
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Acumen Occasional Pamphlets 12, Acumen Publications, 2008 £3.50 www.acumen-poetry.co.uk
I like maps. The author of this pamphlet draws on his experience as an ordnance surveyor, revising ‘One Inch’ maps (although that’s only one of the things he’s done), and this appealed to me, especially in the title poem and the associated ‘Take Five’, the final two poems in the collection. What’s going on in these poems is quite complicated. The poet is not only reacting to visual artist Richard Long’s response to a map of Dartmoor, but also (using the persona of the original surveyor) reacting to the experience of creating the original map, especially to the aspects that “maps do not show”. There is a little joke going on here too: the surveyor is “fortuitously Porlocked” by the artist.
Maps do not show the Seasons’ change; the trees
One has the sense that the poet is enjoying this, and it is enjoyable in turn for the reader. The pamphlet as a whole, though, struck me as uneven. In places I found the language over-heavy and had to fight the impulse to strike out adjectives as they proliferated (‘the molten-green, albescent sea”). At other points, I couldn’t help being aware of language techniques—repetitions, metaphors, alliteration. They got in the way for me, as though Wilkinson was simply trying too hard to say it effectively, instead of just ... saying it.
From Thames Head Bridge the snuffling river wends
I think that might be worth reading a hundred miles for. Helena Nelson
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