ORIGIN STORY
It began with
a walk in the woods.
The weather
became us.
We came to
find the owls
who became
trees.
Feathers
whitened
the corners
of our room
which became
our winter habits.
So we
invented songs
which became
the animals
who abided
unseen
in a house
that reason left
every time we
travelled
into
ourselves. When we awoke
our arms were
crossed
over our
chests like bats.
Dreaming
became us.
Only the
movies delivered us
from a winter
of no color.
We turned on
the snow.
We turned on
no.
Yes became us
like forever
and sunsmell
like patterns
and lace
not ever
about whether
the world was
good or bad
because it
was only both.
This is why
we followed
the animals
and the
animals
followed us
back.
Introduced by
Matthea Harvey, Iowa City poet Mary Austin Speaker’s first trade poetry
collection, Ceremony (Slope, 2013),
is an exploration of celebration and ritual, and the poetics of physical and
metaphysical space. Opening with short couplets of endless variety and
smallness, Speaker’s poems are built through the accrual of phrases, such as
the poem “The Talking that Places Make,” that begins: “As awkwardly as / always
this city // will grow / after I and everyone // leave it / get taller.” Each poem exists nearly as an endless, single threaded line, broken up into phrases
for the possibilities of further meanings to enter. The book is structured in
four sections: “The Field of Unspeakable Color,” “To Inhabit,” “You Can Have It
All” and “Numerousness.” The short phrase-lines of the poems in the second
section, the twenty-part section/sequence “To Inhabit,” is reminiscent of the
smallness of Robert Creeley’s poems, sans the stanza breaks. Each section flows
with the stagger and slight interruption of line breaks, but without pause, and
intrigue for how they might be read aloud—with a regulated slowness or a
rushing speed? The first poem in the sequence reads:
this seductive
calm
belies a fire
roiling there
in the darker
quiet we have
no calm no
symmetry
a legion
of fecund
reasons and
two shoulders
squaring to
protect this
gentle
paradox
we’ve yet
to name
Even with
stanza breaks, such as the poems in the other sections, there is an urgency to Speaker’s lines, her poem-sentences pushing deeper into her dreamy wisdom. In
her introduction, Harvey writes:
How to talk
about a book that delves into mystery head-on? Maybe by tacking how it
bewilders (indeed, there is a poem titled “Bewilderment.”) Speaker’s short,
sometimes unpunctuated lines allow you to track her myriad transformations,
thing we couldn’t see without the poet’s magnifying glass: “this too / is
exhaling: particles moving off / in their tiny boats, violet and charged //
toward each pole…” Her lyrics revel in the personification of the natural world
(trees have wrists “whitened with wind”) and words (“a flood of yes”), but also
the reverse: “Our fingers grew restless // and skittered over tabletops, like
mice.”
[…]
Speaker’s
work offers so many delights—tiny tide pools of rhyme, the abstract made
concrete, the concrete made uncertain. In “Origin Story” she writes, “Dreaming
became us,” and the doubled nature of that statement is exactly what this book
enacts. We enjoy how dreaming makes us look, but also how it makes us look.
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