A ghost sitting on the crowded platform
Beside train cars bedded down with children
You post your petal face on Instagram
Before signal grows dim, phone not plugged in
Back against concrete, cross-legged on tile
Tacky with bottled water and canned goods
Neighbours dividing them scarcely less pale
Than you, trees on streets above yet to bud
And may not flower against drifting plumes
Missiles fired in waves from Russia stencil
Across your emptied tower block, living room
Gaping through walls partway sloughed, guts reduced
To landfill, son’s face saved to Pinterest
Petal among petals smudged by what lasts.
John Barton published his tenth chapbook, Stopwatch, in 2024. His thirteenth book of poetry, Compulsory Figures, is forthcoming. He lives in Victoria.
Questions and Answers
Is there a specific moment that inspired you to pursue poetry?
What inspired or motivated you to write this poem?
The idea for this poem came to me during the first week after Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022. Only the weekend before, the Freedom Convoy had been ended in Ottawa and, suddenly, before there was time to take a breath, another event of far more dire import was putting our own problems as a country into more rational perspective. I remember listening to a radio interview with a Kyiv resident who spoke by cellphone from a subway station. She’d gone there to shelter during one of the first Russian bombardments of the city. The woman described the conditions underground that she and other residents had found themselves to be sharing and how they were relying on continued connectivity to feel secure in themselves despite the unexpected precarity of their physical circumstances. One day, she had been pursuing her life as an ordinary citizen, perhaps even disbelieving—or wanting to disbelieve—that the long-threatened invasion would ever transpire, and on the next, she found herself contending with actual threats to her own mortality—and the mortality of others, especially of children, who had no role in the causes of this war. What do we bring with us to survive (phone charges and tins of soup?) and how do we find ways to continue to leave traces of ourselves on the world (Instagram and Pinterest?)?
What poetic techniques did you use in this poem, and how did your writing process unfold?
“In a Station of the Kyiv Metro” is a sonnet, with ten-syllable lines and a very slant take on the Shakespearean rhyme scheme; I was less concerned with making each line perfectly iambic than allowing the restrictions imposed by the syllable count and the rhymes to push me deeper into the subject material. Turns in the poem’s argument fall after the eighth and twelfth lines, modulating the flow of ideas and feelings. As the form helped me figure out what I wanted to say, I found myself thinking about the cherry blossoms coming out on street after street around me in Victoria. I started to imagine them being laid flat by bombs. The lines of that great poem of the underground, Ezra Pound’s “In a Station of the Metro”—“The apparition of these faces in the crowd: Petals on a wet, black bough.”—shadowed my thoughts.
Pound led me to some of the imagery and mood that I needed for my own poem. The people sheltering in my poem feel and fear themselves to be ghosts; the ways in which they post their own images online are ghostly. Also, by alluding to Pound, I am attempting another kind of virtual connection to the permanence that literature provides, as my way of providing a sense of continuity in a situation that is imbued with the potential for annihilation. This moment I describe is but one in many that came before and will come after in the lives of those seeking sanctuary, moments going by as fast as the efficient commuter train they had ridden only days before.