Frontenac Street Sign

Tom Three Persons

by Yvonne Trainer

Poet and scholar Yvonne Trainer enriches her complex and haunting portrait of Tom Three Persons, a Native Canadian and the first Calgary Stampede superhero, with a varied collage of images and writings and the personal viewpoint of a prairie ranch heritage.

Reviews

Yvonne Trainer. Damn fine writin’. Yep, that about sums ‘er up. ~Janice Mathie-Heck, filling Station
In poems, photographs, letters and newspaper clippings, Trainer re-imagines a rodeo rider from the Blood Reserve who became champion at the first Calgary Stampede in 1912. Laconic and reflective, Trainer’s writing seems to rein in a lyricism that bursts through in poems like “The Mind Is The Place.” ~Harry Vandervlist, FFWD
The language is simple; the narrative uncluttered; the lines spare and clean in the way Bert Almon’s or Glen Sorestad’s lines are clean: this is prairie realism as it should be, born of the soil. The poetic is as true to its subject as the short grass prairie is to the soil. There is no straining after effects or self-conscious posturing or rhetoric. If you think it’s easy to do this, try it! I for one am happy Yvonne Trainer is back with a virtuoso performance. ~Richard Stevenson, The Danforth Review
Yvonne Trainer listens with a poet’s love to the sounds around her. She hears voices, finds poems, in Tom Three Persons’ story. She retells Persons’ world, tells her own world, with such tact and such care we are brought into a new hearing. We listen in on the invented real music of her poetry. ~Dennis Cooley
Yvonne Trainer’s deceptively simple documentary poem about Tom Three Persons engages both the history of a time and place and of a man we should know. In her collage of found material, invention, and photographs, Trainer brings this extraordinary man into language where he can tell his story as it needs to be told. As Tom tells us, “names float in air”, and the poet, listening, catches them and their embodiments for her readers. ~Douglas Barbour
Emotional and physical impressions emerge with bone-crunching reality through this unique collection of poems, letters and reminiscences. A lyrical-narrative portraying highs and lows in the life of Tom Three Persons, an unforgettable First Nations cowboy. Yahoo! ~Shirlee Smith Matheson

Samples

Tom Three Persons

My name is Tom Three Persons
I’m no relation to the American
Tom Three Persons
named because he killed three men
I never killed anyone
nor robbed a bank
nor anything like that
I was named because of three women
mother saw walking past the door
the moment of my birth
Father claimed there were no women
The door was closed
I am not even sure there was a door
I may have been born in a teepee

I was named because we’re all named
Because Bloods believe
names float in air

I the receiver
of a name given
I who knew none of this
who crowed myself to sleep
strapped in my cradle board
under the watchful look of crows
I who called their name
before I knew my own.

the beginning

Born at the beginning of the beginning
Louis Riel hanged
Poundmaker and Big Bear jailed
Born at the beginning
          of railroads     and fences
          and irrigation ditches
          built like birth canals

Released
          from walls
                    and flesh

No not released
but kicked a way through
wearing rattlesnake boots
and red angora chaps
Slit the umbilical cord
between sharp guns
faster than a rustler cutting fence

No better yet
          rode out of a chute
                    on a shiny black
                              bucking horse

a winner.

Learning the Language

What kind of life
was that? Jimmy
at St. Paul’s Mission School
bent like a question mark
in a desk
writing
“I must not speak Blackfoot”
one hundred times
every time his tongue slipped

At that school he learned
a powerful new language

silence.
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Tom Three Persons
ISBN: 0-9684903-8-7
Price: $14.95

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