RAY FUNK
UK-based Trinidadian Anthony Joseph’s fifth book of poetry, Sonnets for Albert, just published in the UK, is a poet’s haunting reckoning of a father who was largely absent from his son’s life. As Joseph noted to the BBC, “They’re very direct…homages to my father (and) investigations of … masculinity and fatherhood.”
But is a long time now we forgive you, Albert.
Not for what you was not, but for who you promise
to be and unfulfill. For the way your laughter
could spark up space like matchstick flame.
There are over 50 sonnets in the collection, focused on Joseph’s complex relationship with his father. It also displays numerous photographs of his father that add resonance to the tales, the hurt, the love, the memories.
These are not Shakespearean sonnets in iambic pentameter with a set rhyming scheme, but modern, free-form 14-line poems with a mesmerisingly appropriate calypso rhythm.
In a recent interview with the Amplify Project, Joseph talked about them: “The best sonnets, enable you to have a moment of contemplation and then…you move away…I was attracted to the sonnet form for that reason…
“(Some)] of them are filled with grief. Some of them are filled with humour.”
The poems present a complex vision of his father, their relationship, and the effect his absence created.
Some material in the collection deals with his father’s declining health. He was "very charismatic and very proud. And he hid his suffering. Whatever suffering that he experienced in his life, he wouldn’t speak about it.”
Focusing on his father’s life, Joseph explores his feelings, seeks to understand his father, and connect with siblings with whom he had little contact as well as his father’s death and final rites.
Fire for you, and the mothers of the church lit candles
upon your breastbone. Fire was lit, even in the hole
to purify the earth to receive you. They poured flame
from brass goblets of croton and pink ixora.
Joseph’s meditations on his father take a different turn in Memory Ghost I, which starts with a conversation with filmmaker Mariel Brown, who made a film about her father, the writer Wayne Brown's, Unfinished Sentences, and moves on to Joseph’s vision of the need to be a very different father for his own children.
that when I am gone into that gone momentum,
that my daughters
will also remember me
as fondly as the filmmaker remembers her father
and forgives him his human failings. I hope that there is time still
to shape the ghost
that must enter their memory.
[caption id="attachment_962105" align="alignnone" width="680"] Anthony Joseph -[/caption]
There was a strong buildup for the publication of this book online. Eighteen months ago a powerful, half-hour radio show on BBC 4 was released also called Sonnets for Albert. It doe