Authors: David O'Meara
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Poetry, #World Literature
One day all those kittens and pups
we drowned in a sack
will come crawling back.
They’ll drag up shit
from L.A. to the Moscow underground.
They’ll claw through our exhaust,
oil and grease
that’s decanted into sewer grates
by generations of squeegee kids.
Their scratches will resound
like some turntablist’s retro stack
that
doo-langs
as it’s tipped from a milk crate.
They won’t be fucking around.
They’ll hunt us down.
They’ll get a fix and calibrate
like the Hubble’s squint staring in,
one eye a plaster cast
from Pompeii, the other in decay
like Chernobyl.
They’ll raise a din,
their yips like drone strikes, their howls
a martyr’s mother on
CNN
,
their meows the opinionated crap
we generated in chatrooms
so easily after the fact. Just you wait.
They’re no Mutt and Jeff.
On their tags there’s
WTO
and
IMF
engraved in gold. And when we’re found
on the business end of their
GPS
,
they’ll say, ‘Did you really think
you’d give our sins the slip
by filling up some burlap
and tipping us in the drink?’
They’re coming around, crammed
up the yingyang
with talking points and spreadsheets
on every bailout,
g8 summit, profit bonus
and offshore bank we ever had.
Doo-lang, doo-lang
.
You must change your life, but first,
wait a few minutes. After all, Rilke couch-surfed
from castle to château for a decade before
his internal mood ring shifted to purple
and signalled the muse. He finessed this later
as creative possession: an impulse so focused
he’s said to forget the time of day,
though Wikipedia claims he never missed
a meal at Duino. Big deal. Whatever
it was, he could direct the spirit’s surges
and knew how to work a crowd in its wake.
Imagine him on Facebook.
LOL
.
Precious, yes, but how not to be
when you’re born in Prague and write
about angels. In any case, you won’t catch me
mooning along parapets and sea walls;
not because I wouldn’t, but so far
there’ve been no offers. I booked a week
at Banff in a forest studio,
ate scones, startled a ground squirrel,
kept forgetting to bring a jacket,
and one night heard blues harmonica
drift from the aboriginal arts lodge nearby.
I texted a friend who’s Ojibwa.
WTF
?
He wrote back ‘Why don’t you go
over there and ask them what they’ve got
to be blue about?’ Touché.
So I managed some edits, and through
the skylight watched yellow leaves
parachute the branched heights to amass
as ground cover. No thought-fox
raised its rusty snout, or gifted prints
across the page, though a few fingers
of cask-strength Scotch made
the waiting a little easier. Paradox:
to be perfectly here, you must
stop thinking about it, then it’s on.
Most days I leaf around trying to sidle
out of the peripheral sight of myself,
so when I focus again, I might
be astonished, do something real, feel
like Jarrett at Köln, overtired
and saddled with the wrong piano,
forced to work the corners we get
backed into. It might be a thunderbolt,
but mostly a mule I keep thinking of
when I picture myself in the grind between
the start of some work and its end result,
but like an apprentice before the koan,
I’m afflicted by the absent revelation,
never sure if it’s better to change the light bulb
or stare into the dark.
A mariachi band has just begun;
the
cantinero
muddles lime, ice and mint.
Is it industry, folly or perverse fun
to lounge here, behind my glasses’ darkly tint,
reading elegies in the sun?
Crouched in the back, the official team
portrait, his gesture above a teammate's shoulder:
who is he giving the finger to?
Players, those fielders from New York
maybe, who taunt their league rivals with snorts,
bored with delay in the April
dugouts while waiting to pose for their own team
photo. Or maybe it's Radbourn's
scorn for these âpictures' that's lifted his digit so
snidely, irate at the tripod and bellows
holding the game from its opening pitch. Or
managers maybe, or press who reported drunken
brawls and philandering.
Maybe it's time with a capital T that faces Radbourn's
finger, a signal he's sent from his age to ours,
showing he knows we're all stuck in a world
made by palookas who dream the fast buck while
playing each other for suckers,
so why not break the measure this once
just to say Fuck You
and So What, it might be the only
thing that's left worth doing,
the only thing we're any good for
in this unexamined life.
So slight, no weight, a non-bug,
it wafts past
like an ash flake bobs
above a bonfire’s heat,
its shape
an ephemeral asterisk.
Do fruit flies ever die of old age?
At what moment are they living
and then they’re dead?
The only times I’ve seen them die
were flat between hands,
or dialing out their limits of energy
in a glass of stale beer.
When Voyager 1
was scheduled to clear
the solar system,
NASA
signalled its onboard camera
to swing back
and take a picture of home. Six
billion kilometres out,
Earth’s photo
a ‘pale blue dot’ .12
pixels in size.
I am in there too,
a child in trampled clover.
If I stand on a scale
and hold the fruit fly in my hand,
does the needle drop a bit
the second it dies?
Where once there was nothing, something.
Where once there was nothing, nothing.
I’ve been reading how they still dredge up
tacks and ivory eyelets
scattered near Simon the Cobbler’s shop,
where Socrates
often stopped to chinwag in the Athenian agora.
As the weather clears
and the austere linden sags into leaf, I watch
our neighbours
empty out their rooms across the street,
propping odds, ends and bags
of garbage against the realtor’s sign; a big, bold SOLD
in red Calibri.
Of the agora scrap, the ancient inventory
piles up: amphorae,
broken capitals and
ostraka
used as votes to exile
fellow citizens,
so many loops and lines alike the same hand
must have carved them,
proof of ancient vote-rigging. We think the news is over,
but it never is.
Mid-May I watch and rewatch the Madsen doc
on Onkalo, the ‘hiding place’
in northern Finland. Did I mention you should see it?
At surface the clocks
run very fast
, Peter Wikberg notes in his Scandinavian
accent,
while in the rock
it goes very, very slowly
. His subject is the shelf life
of nuclear waste,
where they hope to stash it away forever.
Greek diggers raised
curse tablets found in ancient wells. Socrates might
have known their authors:
students, merchants and neighbours who shared a bench
in the Theatre of Dionysus
and heard the rhapsodes stitch Homeric tales into local
stories of their own,
the orange Attic sun radiant on the southern slope
of the Acropolis. Onkalo
will be closed and backfilled with rows of radiation tubes
secured in passages
five kilometres below.
Conditions on the ground
will change
, Berit Lundqvist
admits at the table next to Wikberg.
On the surface you never
know what’s going to
happen. It could be wars; it could be economic depression.
A caribou lifts its muzzle
and listens across the taiga’s granite and snow. My neighbours shift
a shovel, rake
and lawn chairs from back shed to scuffed, grey porch
for moving day, clear
a bookcase of knick-knacks and novels, then clear the wall
of shelves and art,
posing tiredly in bare windows as I browse
and click, exploring links.
‘I bind Euandros with a leaden bond,’ one tablet states,
the goal to handicap
a rival actor in performance. This curse was scraped
into hammered lead, rolled
and clasped with tacks, then submerged to set its spell
in motion. Online
new headlines replace Fukushima and Damascus, the late
Eurozone undertow
shored up in an Athenian square where a pensioner
in protest and despair
has blown his brains out.
Sing, goddess, sing the rage
of Peleus’ son Achilles
,
Euandros intones to the festival crowd, his voice
steady and clear,
the theatre’s tiers raised with broken stone from older
temples. By June,
new neighbours paint the pine railing and steps
with two fresh coats
of biscuit-brown acrylic. I’ve watched them watch the street,
weighing their lives
by what they chose to leave or take, knowing
we must make
strange with a place before we inherit the sense
of never having been
anywhere else, and curse it for ruin, and stoop to paint
the porch again.
We sing to free ourselves from the room
–
Wild Flag
‘Vicious’:
Ethos anthropos daimon
: ‘A man’s character is his fate.’
‘Dance’: Osel Hita Torres, the name of the boy chosen by the Dalai
Lama as a reincarnation of a spiritual leader, denounced the Buddhist
order in his twenties, citing ‘the misery of a youth deprived of television,
football and girls.’ Taken away from his family as a child and forced to
live a monastic, secluded life, he had been allowed to socialize only
with other reincarnated souls, and by eighteen had never seen couples
kiss. At the time of writing, he was studying film in Spain. The
epigraph for the poem is his reaction to his first disco experience.
‘Circa Now’: Michael Madsen, dir.,
Into Eternity: A Film for the Future
.
(Denmark, 2010); Claudio Magris,
Danube
(London: The Harvill Press,
1999).
‘In Event of Moon Disaster’: Lawrence ‘Titus’ Oates was an Antarctic
explorer on Scott’s ill-fated expedition to be the first to reach the
South Pole. Aware his severe frostbite was jeopardizing his companions’
survival on the return journey, he famously announced, ‘I am just
going outside and may be some time,’ before exiting their tent into the
blizzard. His body has never been found.
‘Ten Years’: see Virgil,
The Aeneid
. Book 3.
‘Loot’: Lawrence Rothfield,
The Rape of Mesopotamia
. (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2009).
‘Talk’:
‘The intellect of man is forced to choose
Perfection of the life, or of the work …’
– ’The Choice,’ W.B. Yeats
‘End Times’: This poem borrows images from the article ‘Life in the
Zone’ by Steve Featherstone, published in
Harper
’s magazine (June
2011). Lines in italics are borrowed from Svetlana Aleksievich’s
Voices
from Chernobyl: The Oral History of a Nuclear Disaster
. (New York: Picador,
2006).
‘Charles ‘Old Hoss’ Radbourn’s Finger, 1886’:
(First known photograph of the middle finger)
Greeks weren’t the source of its phallic connections necessarily, though
first to imply an offensive nature,
documents claim.
In The Clouds
by Aristophanes
Socrates lectures on poetic meter. A novice who
stresses he certainly knows what a dactyl
is, then produces his middle digit, since dactylos
signifies both a finger and rhythmic measure, a long and then two
shorterish spans like the joints of
fingers, or a penis and testicles, the last a dactylic word like
poetry
which has a falling rhythm ...
So many thanks to my family and friends. I am extremely grateful for
support provided through the Canada Council for the Arts, the
Ontario Arts Council, the City of Ottawa and the Banff Centre
Leighton Colony during the writing of this book. Some poems were
published previously in
Arc
magazine,
The Walrus
,
The Best Canadian
Poetry in English
2012 and Toronto Poetry Vendors. Thank you to the
editors. A version of ‘Vicious’ was performed as part of the Very
Short Play Festival 2011. Much thanks to John Koensgen and New
Theatre of Ottawa. Thanks to Alana Wilcox, Leigh Nash and Evan
Munday at Coach House; to Harold Hoefle, Simon Armitage and
Ken Babstock for comments; and I’m especially grateful to Kevin
Connolly and my editor Jeramy Dodds for superb edits.