Whale Day by Billy Collins
Source: Purchased Hardcover, 144 pgs. I am an Amazon Affiliate
Whale Day and Other Poems by Billy Collins often takes the most mundane situation and spirals it out into something that is by turns humorous and poignant. Aging is a theme throughout the collection, but it is not aging with grace, but with a sense of humor. Imagine your aging dog and walking them down the street, how the gait of the dog changes and how the dog stops to be picked up by the owner rather than continue under its own power. This is exactly the situation in "Walking My Seventy-Five-Year-Old Dog." Collins takes this situation and reminds us that it isn't polite to ask a lady her age (a bit tongue in cheek), reminding us that to age is a normal course of life that we need to observe but not dwell on.
Other humorous poems that made me laugh (at a time when a pandemic has made us all stressed and sad) include "Down on the Farm" with its fainting goats, "Imperial Garden" in which a Chinese cookie fortune says less about the recipient than the giver, "Mice" where the observer views the burning down of a house as a new adventure for his small friends, "The Card Players" in which he compares his current game to a Cezanne painting and realizes his game may not be as artful, among so many others.
One of the most selfish statements, "Me First," is turned on its ear in this collection and becomes a moment of love, while still being a little bit selfish but understandable given the attachment of the narrator to the object of his affections. Like "Anniversary," there is a selfishness in wanting the "love" to remain alive for as long as possible, even if that life is lived by a baby born on the person's day of death. The final section of the collection is a homage to devotion and love, even as things begin to fade away like the "tear-off calendars,/the days disappearing one page at a time.//" (from "My Father's Office, John Street, New York City, 1953", pg. 103-107)
Collins' latest collection is one to keep on the shelf for always. His conversational style is dominant here, and his poems will leave readers with joy and hope, but also more things to think about. Whale Day and Other Poems by Billy Collins is another splendid collection of more than just ordinary moments in time and it explores the effects of aging and how we can handle them if we choose to be less serious.
RATING: Cinquain
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About the Poet:
Billy Collins, is an American poet, appointed as Poet Laureate of the United States from 2001 to 2003. In 2016, Collins retired from his position as a Distinguished Professor at Lehman College of the City University of New York after teaching there almost 50 years.