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Cover of issue #214

Current Issue: #214 (Autumn 2012)

Canadian Literature's Issue 214 (Autumn 2012) is now available. The issue features articles by Germaine Warkentin, Susan Gingell, Deanna Reder, Allison Hargreaves, Daniel Heath Justice, Kristina Fagan Bidwell, Jo-Ann Episkenew, Andrea King, Joanne Leow, and Ana María Fraile, and new Canadian poetry & book reviews.

CanLit Poets

The Gravel Pit

by M. Travis Lane

The Gravel Pit

Questions & Answers

What inspired "The Gravel Pit"?

"The Gravel Pit" is a "concrete" poem: a poem which primarily exists to be seen, as print on a page, as a sort of picture with words instead of drawings. The poem would be better if it were printed on a broader page so that the skunk tracks could be seen more clearly as going up one side. The poem presents itself as an experience, without any interpretation except of the visual (the skunk tracks suggest that the skunk dug, turned aside). The poem was inspired by my reading other concrete poems and deciding that I could make one too.

What poetic techniques did you use in "The Gravel Pit"?

I do not find it useful to talk about "technique" in a poem; I am more comfortable with the word "style"—e.g. is this poem written in a relaxed conversational style, or in a meditative and very personal style, or in a joking style, or in a musical or in a chanting style, etc.

More poems by M. Travis Lane:


"The Gravel Pit" originally appeared in Canadian Literature #170-171: Nature / Culture (Autumn/Winter 2001)

MLA: Lane, M. Travis. CanLit Poets: "The Gravel Pit" by M. Travis Lane. canlit.ca. Canadian Literature, 25 Sept. 2008. Web. 22 May 2013.

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