Read The Road In Is Not the Same Road Out Online
Authors: Karen Solie
where the wind in its many directions is directionless
and impossible to put your back to. He said you'd been living
rough for a while, he wouldn't go to the wake at the bar,
it was too much sadness. That day I'd walked the beach,
picking up shells, their spirals of Archimedes and logarithmic
spirals, principle of proportional similarity that protects
the creature and makes it beautiful. Sandpipers materialized
through tears the wind made, chasing fringes of the rising tide.
At first there were two, then three appeared, but when I began
to pay attention I realized they were everywhere.
It was the same life, more or less,
yet suddenly a flight itinerary represented
the most tangible indication of my fate.
From the air I saw mountains, forest,
lakes in which dissolved the notion
of ownership, and the sweet little Beechcraft
wagged its tail on landing
in a crosswind. My fellow passengers
claimed their long guns, carried them in cases
like guitars out of the terminal.
Darkness accompanied the second segment,
the Dash 8 traversing the southwest
in high cloud and swinging out over
the Atlantic. Lights might have been
ships, or islands, towns someone
from there could identify. But I wasn't from there.
Where land ended
and the water began was indiscernible,
though I was not afraid. Because I didn't know
what I was seeing.
Having crawled from the desert
of the 1970s already greying a little, impatient,
with physical inconsistencies, crying
bosons and fermions, crying out
the four forces, calling the unified
from the unnamed wastes, it saw in our homes
a vacancy, began repurposing the furniture.
Already it seems never to have been otherwise.
When I think of it my atoms are as the weakening
euro, the housing bubble, too many parts
in search of the one part, it's a joke.
It's a giant scientific instrument outside Geneva.
An argument that knows not me
or my siblings, that has no dominion
over me yet enters my thinking
and undermines it. Then all of my theories
seem raised by the state, fearful,
acting out inappropriately.
                                               I went to see you
on an airplane and on an airplane
was I medicated amid the transatlantic
generation and its complimentary
beverages. People of the light
flying over the living waters. My body,
belted in, a joke, and the heap we call
a mind also, each atom an engine schematic,
a backup system sequence or a prayer
from childhood though I'd lost my faith,
that's how weak I am.
But in the cockpit, threefold,
the Great Invisible Virgin Spirit was incorruptible
in my sedation and in the cabin
the new cashless society
and off the wings degrees
of freedom.
                     No patterns emerged
between us, it was new
each time, each event its own, with fresh
odds. We honoured the principle.
Though our creditors didn't see it that way.
They filled our past
with their notices. Their notices
were our bridesmaids. When I think of it
all my atoms are past-due notices
but with the option to consolidate as one large
debt. The market writes its autobiography
on minds and bodies, my own and those
of my siblings. Are we not innocent
with respect to it? Our credit rating is
a joke, our homes venture with us
through the rental agencies.
                                                  We went west
before the west dried up. Between Calaway Park
and Dead Man's Flats the cumulonimbus
extended their funnels, melancholy
and inquisitive, they love
the earth so much. Long-haul truckers,
shepherds of product, blew past
on deadline into the storm, tweaking
in their cabs, each cloaked in his machine
with a handgun for an angel
in the lots and roadside pullouts.
If you can't see it, it has
the advantage.
                          If you can't see it,
it's philosophy. A game between us
and the nature of things. People of intent in the valley
of the shadow of. One hundred metres underground,
a divine heart races in the apparatus
and soon we will hear its voice. It will speak out
from the invisible orders not as an attribute,
a quality or quantity, but a truth perfected
in all the ineffable places. A live
hypothesis. A supersymmetry.
Is it possible to love something like this?
I prayed it might happen to me.
“Fables of the Reconstruction” is the title of R.E.M.'s third album.
The title “When Asked Why He'd Been Talking to Himself, Pyrrho Replied He Was Practicing to Be a Nice Fellow” is adapted, along with a line in the poem, from Diogenes Laertius's
Life of Pyrrho.
The World of “The World” is a cruise liner of 165 luxury apartments owned by a community of residents who live on board as it continuously sails the globe. The poem also draws from Ludwig Wittgenstein's
Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus.
“Rothko via Muncie, Indiana” includes lines quoted and adapted from a letter written by Mark Rothko and Adolph Gottlieb to
The New York Times
in 1943. The poem was inspired also by
Middletown,
a 1982 documentary series set in Muncie and produced by Peter Davis.
“I Let Love In” is the title of a song by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds.
The title “All That Is Certain Is Night Lasts Longer Than the Day” is from W. G. Sebald's
The Rings of Saturn,
translated by Michael Hulse.
“Forty” is for David Seymour.
Since “Life Is a Carnival” was written, a third member of The Band, Levon Helm, has followed Richard Manuel and Rick Danko. The title is that of a song by The Band.
“Roof Repair and Squirrel Removal” contains a line from Walter Benjamin's “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.”
“Lord of Fog” includes a phrase from Shakespeare's
Richard II.
“Darklands” is the title of the Jesus and Mary Chain's second album.
“Spiral” is in memory of Jim Coates.
“The Living Option” adapts a line from William James's “The Will to Believe” and uses a refrain from “The Second Discourse of the Great Seth,” included in
The Nag Hammadi Scriptures,
edited by Marvin Meyer.
I am grateful to the editors of the journals and anthologies in which these poems, in earlier versions, first appeared:
Poetry
“Bitumen”
The Nation
“Ode,” “The Corners,” “Trouble Light”
Riddle Fence
“Rental Car,” “Fables of the Reconstruction,” “A Western,”
“Affirmations,” “The National Gallery,” “The Living Option”
The Paris Review
“Museum of the Thing,” “Lord of Fog,” “Darklands,”
“Museum of the Thing II”
Eighteen Bridges
“Rothko via Muncie, Indiana”
The Humber Literary Review
“Interior,” “A Good Hotel in Rotterdam,” “Prospect”
Magma
“When Asked Why He'd Been Talking to Himself, Pyrrho Replied He Was Practicing to Be a Nice Fellow,” “Your News Hour Is Now Two Hours”
Vallum
“Via”
Room
“I Let Love In,” “Lift Up Your Eyes,” “All That Is Certain Is Night
Lasts Longer Than the Day,” “Sault Ste. Marie,” “Against Lyric”
Brick
“Keebleville,” “Forty”
Studio
(online)
“Birth of the Rifle”
The Dark Horse
“Roof Repair and Squirrel Removal”
The Walrus
“Life Is a Carnival”
Cordite Poetry Review
“For the Ski Jump at Canada Olympic Park, Calgary”
Tag: Canadian Poets at Play
“The Midlands”
Poetry London
“The Road In Is Not the Same Road Out,” “Conversion,” “Spiral”
The New Quarterly
“Spiral”
Hazlitt
(online)
“Conversion”
A significant number of these poems previously appeared in
The Living Option: Selected Poems.
Sincere thanks to Neil Astley and Bloodaxe Books.
The Canada Council for the Arts, Ontario Arts Council, Toronto Arts Council, the University of St. Andrews, and Barns-Graham Charitable Trust provided crucial financial and professional support toward the completion of this book.
I'm deeply grateful to Jonathan Galassi for his encouragement and his faith in this book. And to Sarah MacLachlan, Kelly Joseph, and everyone at House of Anansi, for their work and care.
As always, to my family, who are in every word.
Thanks to Ken Babstock, Kevin Connolly, Michael Helm, Michael Redhill, Christopher Richards, Damian Rogers, and David Seymour, for their insight and generosity as readers.
And especially, to James Langer.
Karen Solie
was born in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan. Her collections of poems include
Short Haul Engine,
Modern and Normal,
Pigeon,
and
The Living Option.
She has received the Griffin Poetry Prize, the Pat Lowther Memorial Award, and the Trillium Book Award for Poetry.
The Living Option
was named one of the best poetry books of 2013 by the
National Post
(Toronto) and
The Independent
(London). Solie lives in Toronto. You can sign up for email updates
here
.
ALSO BY
KAREN SOLIE
SHORT HAUL ENGINE
MODERN AND NORMAL
PIGEON
THE LIVING OPTION:
SELECTED POEMS
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