The Lions bare of snow, crowded express buses, a giant red turning letter W.
Vancouver: A Poem
is George Stanley's vision of the city where he lives, though he does
not call it his own. Vancouver, the city, becomes Stanley's palimpsest:
an overwritten manuscript on which the words of others are still faintly
visible. Here the Food Floor's canned exotica, here the stores of
Chinatown, here the Cobalt Hotel brimful of cheap beer and indifferent
women.
The poet travels through the urban landscape on foot and by public
transit, observing the multifarious life around him, noting the at
times abrupt changes in the built environment, and vestiges of its brief
history. As he records his perceptions, the city enters his
consciousness in unforeseen ways, imposing its categories and language.
Skirting chestnuts on the sidewalk or reading William Carlos Williams's
"Paterson" on the Granville Bridge, the poet travels along the inlet,
past the mountains, under the trees, interrogating the local world with
his words.