Deft and deeply intelligent poems on the nature of language
In Just Saying, improbable and even untenable speakers are briefly constituted―only to disappear. The result is part carnival, part nightmare. A television pundit's rhetoric segues into an unusual succulent with writhing maroon tongues. When the world suddenly becomes legible, is that revelation or psychosis? In this book, the voice of the Lord and/or the voice of the security state can come from anyplace. The problem of identity becomes acute. The poems in Just Saying may be imagined as chimeras, creatures that appear when old distinctions break down and elements generally kept separate combine in new ways. Here Armantrout both worries (as a dog worries a bone) and celebrates the groundless fecundity of being and of language.
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RAE ARMANTROUT is a professor of writing in the Literature Department at the University of California at San Diego, and the author of eleven books of poetry, including Money Shot, Versed, Next Life, and Veil: New and Selected Poems. Praise for Money Shot "Armantrout has the ability to magnify the merest of words into an essay. True to the postmodern tradition, she gives no answer to the provocative questions she raises. Instead Money Shot offers sure proof of one thing: A well-wrought book of poems." ―John Herbert Cunningham, Rain Taxi "…There are a lot of possibilities. Which is exciting, and frightening. … Indeed, the charged openness of language is itself enough to power these poems. … Let's play a game, Armantrout seems to say. This game has to do with language, and either it will destroy us or leave us alone on a sunny day. Take your pick." ―Nick Sturm, Laurel Review Praise for Versed "Rae Armantrout is the most philosophical sort of poet, continually seeking in her collections to summon and surmise the contemporary character of subjective experience and, further, to test the limits of knowledge. … Short lines in brief poems are polyvalent in both voicing and implication, inviting multiple readings … yet pleasure arises in contemplating both the options and the paradox." ―Tom Griffin, Bookforum "Written under a diagnosis of cancer ('I just called / to fill you in'), Versed is a major and moving addition to a life's work in many-angled reflection." ―Jeremy Noel-Tod, Times Literary Supplement
Armantrout explores existential questions with rare economy and often painful precision. Here the Pulitzer Prize–winning poet scrutinizes marketing slogans, corporate catchphrases, and metaphysical quandaries. I practice high speed de- / selection, states one speaker; another defiantly proclaims, Cancer / is old school. Armantrout offers her audience narrow but glistening clues to her own bafflement about old age, violence, and an increasingly globalized world, writing, I want to explore the post-hope zeitgeist. Not infrequently, the final lines in Armantrout’s poems kick the reader in the gut. In The Music Teacher, we see a mundane practice room where a plump young man in a cardigan sings off-key about a list of clothes your kids will need to get / at Target. The poem even promulgates its themes by using the adjectives redundant and generic. A less skilled writer might have let the poem descend into a humdrum meditation about artistic ambition dying in the face of domestic obligations. Armantrout, however, deposits us in the school’s red-hot boiler room with the closing line: You and your children are in it together. --Carolyn Alessio
| Acknowledgments............................................................ | ix |
| Scripture.................................................................. | 1 |
| Instead.................................................................... | 3 |
| Old School................................................................. | 5 |
| Dress Up................................................................... | 6 |
| Accounts................................................................... | 7 |
| Event Horizon.............................................................. | 9 |
| Cold....................................................................... | 10 |
| Just Saying................................................................ | 11 |
| Ghosted.................................................................... | 13 |
| Remainder.................................................................. | 15 |
| Suggestion................................................................. | 17 |
| Spent...................................................................... | 19 |
| My Taste................................................................... | 20 |
| Haunts..................................................................... | 21 |
| Parting Shots.............................................................. | 23 |
| Inflection................................................................. | 24 |
| The Look................................................................... | 26 |
| At Least................................................................... | 28 |
| Holding Pen................................................................ | 30 |
| Subdivision................................................................ | 31 |
| My Apocalypse.............................................................. | 32 |
| Things..................................................................... | 33 |
| Entry...................................................................... | 35 |
| Arrivals................................................................... | 37 |
| Circulating................................................................ | 39 |
| Production................................................................. | 40 |
| Being Seen................................................................. | 41 |
| Transactions............................................................... | 43 |
| At......................................................................... | 45 |
| Action Poem................................................................ | 46 |
| The Thinning............................................................... | 47 |
| Elements of Blank.......................................................... | 49 |
| Situation.................................................................. | 50 |
| Midst...................................................................... | 52 |
| Representative............................................................. | 53 |
| Second Order............................................................... | 55 |
| Scale...................................................................... | 56 |
| Custom..................................................................... | 58 |
| And........................................................................ | 59 |
| Treatment.................................................................. | 60 |
| Coming Out................................................................. | 61 |
| Watch This................................................................. | 63 |
| Experts.................................................................... | 64 |
| Experimental Design........................................................ | 66 |
| Meeting Expectations....................................................... | 67 |
| Problem Areas.............................................................. | 68 |
| Between Islands............................................................ | 69 |
| Half Lives................................................................. | 71 |
| Progress................................................................... | 72 |
| The Music Teacher.......................................................... | 74 |
| Without End................................................................ | 75 |
| Bardos..................................................................... | 77 |
| Living Space............................................................... | 79 |
| Luster..................................................................... | 81 |
| Formal Constraints......................................................... | 83 |
| Rounds..................................................................... | 85 |
| Mother's Day............................................................... | 86 |
| Thus....................................................................... | 88 |
| Focus...................................................................... | 89 |
| The Elect.................................................................. | 90 |
| New Intelligence........................................................... | 91 |
| Another.................................................................... | 93 |
| Still and All.............................................................. | 94 |
| Real Time.................................................................. | 96 |
| Meant...................................................................... | 98 |
| Hymn....................................................................... | 100 |
| Stop and Go................................................................ | 101 |
SCRIPTURE
Your violins pursue
the downhill course
of streams,
even to their wild
curls and cowlicks.
To repeat
is not to catch.
* * *
Consider the hummingbirds,
how they're gussied up
and monomaniacal
as the worst (or best)
of you.
Consider the bright,
streamlined emergency
they manifest.
* * *
My leaves form bells,
topknots,
small cups of sex,
overweening, unstoppered.
Not one of you
with all your practice
is so extravagantly
coiffed.
INSTEAD
1
To each his own
severance package.
The Inca
hacked large stones
into the shapes of
nearby peaks.
2
The eerie thing
is that ghosts don't exist.
Rows
of clear droplets
hang from stripped twigs
instead.
3
Pain brings attention
to herself.
Spine on Fire!
Trail Blazer!
(Thinks she's hot.)
Out here
slim trunks bend
every which
OLD SCHOOL
Pull strings taut and
something like
points reappear
in the model.
Take place. Momentum
is conserved. Carry
elementary clone world
punctuation. Hostile
fetus. Cancer
is old school.
Impersonal. Carry
imperial aspirations.
To aspirate
is to breathe in
and choke. Nobody
wants this.
"Nobody did this
to me," screams
now blind Cyclops.
Nobody's listening
is conserved.
DRESS UP
To be "dressed"
is to emit
"virtual particles."
* * *
The spirit of "renormalization" is that
an electron
all by itself
can have infinite
mass and charge,
but, when it's "dressed" ...
* * *
A toddler stares at us
till we look up.
"Flirtatious," we call it.
She waits
until we get the joke
about being here,
being there.
ACCOUNTS
for Brian Keating
Light was on its way
from nothing
to nowhere.
Light was all business
Light was full speed
when it got interrupted.
Interrupted by what?
When it got tangled up
and broke
into opposite
broke into brand-new things.
What kinds of things?
Drinking Cup
"Thinking of you!
Convenience Valet"
How could speed take shape?
* * *
Hush!
Do you want me to start over?
* * *
The fading laser pulse
Information describing the fading laser pulse
is stored
is encoded
in the spin states
of atoms.
God
is balancing his checkbook
God is encrypting his account.
This is taking forever!
EVENT HORIZON
A street person? –
unshaven, haggard –
in a button-down
and a full black skirt.
If an image could talk,
what would it say?
A man in a skirt participates.
A man in a skirt
is never alone?
* * *
We are never alone.
We are men in skirts.
I am.
I draw attention
to myself.
To make a black hole,
one must concentrate.
COLD
What does it take
to stay warm?
Fire in a cage,
gnawing on wood,
throwing sprite
after sprite
off
to extinction.
Each baby's soul
is cute
in the same way.
Rapt attention
on a stalk,
surprised by thirst.
JUST SAYING
What might be said
to disport itself
along the cinderblock
in leaves.
* * *
What I write
I write instead
of ivy.
* * *
Green snouts
in evidence or –
more
to the point –
insolent
and tense.
* * *
What might be said
to writhe
professionally as the days
nod and wink.
GHOSTED
1
Long, loose,
spindly, green
stalks with their few
leaves, bug-eaten
tatters
on which
a black monarch
sits, folding
and unfolding
its wings.
2
A friend's funeral has broken up –
or was that the last dream?
Now I'm struggling
between monuments,
looking for Chuck.
It's getting dark
and I'm pissed off
because he won't answer his cell.
3
On the wall in a coffee bar,
a model's arms
and stern, pretty face
frame a window
(where her chest should be)
and a clear sky beyond
REMAINDER
String of empty offices,
illuminated, festive?
* * *
People exist
to attach importance.
* * *
I practice
high speed deselection.
* * *
The difference
between nothing
and nothingness
is existence.
* * *
My dead friends
don't visit me;
they say I didn't
know them.
* * *
You are cautious
indolent, stubborn,
skeptical, gentle, tense.
* * *
At sunset, pigeons
practice synchronized flying.
* * *
Thus "are" becomes "is,"
"is" becomes "ness."
* * *
Let the burning spill
extend
SUGGESTION
Your brain feels swollen,
as if it's floating
on a string, no, on two,
each held in the balled fist
of an eye.
The feeling produces this image:
two crying children –
brother and sister? –
clutching strings
in an old city of brick, stone.
What does this image explain?
* * *
"In the beginning"
In the end,
these are –
there are –
only suggestions:
"Clockwise" or "counter" –
though there are no clocks.
"Horizontal" or "vertical" –
though there is no horizon.
* * *
Being aware of anything outside yourself
means you aren't sleeping
so you have pushed things away.
Now you are alone with pain.
Pain is as large as you are
and is not obedient.
If you became pain, perhaps,
then you could rest.
But it is not possible
to merge with pain.
SPENT
Suffer as in allow.
List as in want.
Listless as in transcending
desire, or not rising
to greet it.
To list
is to lean,
dangerously,
to one side.
Have you forgotten?
Spent
as in exhausted.
MY TASTE
What it means
to "own sake."
* * *
How to explain
my taste
for phone lines,
the shared slouch
of those two
or this one
like a ruler
where a hummingbird
marks the center
slash.
* * *
This yard which
for years
was a blond patch
and is now
a stylish desert,
bronze crushed granite
between bushes
flowering furiously
HAUNTS
1
Rock eaten
to familiar shapes –
heads cocked
on jagged spines.
* * *
How many
orange, pink, white
rock pinnacles
are visible from here?
Grandeur
is that number
plus distance,
as if "again"
could be made manifest.
2
"Nature" was a 19th-century fad,
cousin to eugenics.
In the 21st century,
America's soft core's
undead.
* * *
On how many bookstore shelves,
lovely, fanged teenagers,
red-eyed, smeared with blood.
PARTING SHOTS
1
Long, confident sentences
of the early visitors,
so unlike ours,
so much like one another,
remark
on the sculpted "grandeur"
of the walls,
and then, with one light touch,
on the bracing sense
of insignificance
that they impart.
2
Behind the only wall in sight,
the defamiliarized wall,
a sniper
tells a camera crew
his work is "invigorating"
because it's "personal."
INFLECTION
When I wake up, I'm dragging
lower incisors
along those above,
and, for an instant,
I experience
satisfaction and fear
in equal parts.
* * *
I'm reading, "The wrath of God
inflicts dragons,
ostriches,
and owls,
seductively singing."
Go on.
* * *
Babble:
horns punctuate
a flexible roar.
* * *
Some roofs have one
or more
water tanks
with pointed hats;
some roofs have none.
Some squares are black
and trimmed in silver;
some are gray.
THE LOOK
The boxer crab
attaches a sea anemone
to each claw,
waves.
* * *
You, small flower-bearing stick,
what is your true name?
* * *
Spooked and spooked again.
It's cute
when the intricately patterned
black and yellow fish
twitches
and shoots off
in a new direction.
* * *
From birth,
you've been moving
your eyes
back and forth,
looking
to be hailed.
Excerpted from just saying by RAE ARMANTROUT. Copyright © 2013 by Rae Armantrout. Excerpted by permission of Wesleyan University Press.
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