POEM IN WHICH WORDS HAVE BEEN LEFT OUT
—After the Miranda Rights, established 1966
You have the right to
remain
anything you can and will
be.
An attorney you cannot
afford will
be provided to you.
You have silent will.
You can be against law.
You cannot afford one.
You remain silent. Anything
you say
will be provided to you.
The right can and will be
against you. Have
anything you say
be right. anything you
say
can be right. the right
remain silent.
You will be held. You will
be
provided. You cannot be
you.
I lifted my mother’s body
from the passenger seat—
the notches of her spine,
her slats of ribs—
each bone against my
skin, her weight
pulling me down even as I
lifted her
my only thought
don’t let go
don’t let go
don’t let go
There are such losses throughout this collection, and for Jensen, it would seem, those losses are deeply personal, and deeply felt. One could see the parallel of “takeoff” and “landing” as the points between birth and death; one could see the entire collection a playful deflection, utilizing sly humour and a playful manner around a book around death, and the grief that so often surrounds and accompanys each experience. As the poem “STILL” offers, further on: “I cannot take / any more pain from other / people’s misery.” The two-page poem ends: “Your suicide was not / a crime against life. It is / a limp most people can’t / detect. I lie I always tell.” His poems are simultaneously delightful and devastating, composing lines so tight that one could bounce a quarter, one might say, off just about any of them.
Having worked his prior collection through an examination of the prose poem, the poems in Instructions between Takeoff and Landing play instead with alternative elements of poetic narrative, including plays on the schoolbook quiz and official government surveys. His poems, one might say, are beset with questions, some of which might not actually be as rhetorical as he suggests. Set in eight sections, every second section, each called “STORY PROBLEMS,” includes each but a single sequence of numbered poems, composed as cycles that work their way through the collection as a whole. Each section within these particular sequences also include an additional call-and-response format, displaying echoes of the classic Greek chorus, of the school workbook “quiz questions,” offering simultaneously revealing and tongue-in-cheek queries that illuminate the poems they sit within. As part of the sequence “INSTRUCTIONS TO THE EXAM TAKER,” the second half of the fourth poem, “MEMORY,” writes:
Quiz on this section:
a. Point to the most revealing expression in this passage. What does it suggest about you? About me? I mean, the narrator.
b. Write a diary entry in the voice of a satellite. Date it December 5, 1977.
c. Sketch the feeling of “isolation” using charcoals or Cray-Pas only.
d. Describe the atmosphere of a planet in our solar system as though it were your childhood.
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