JOIE
DE VIVRE
Of all people of all time in
any category james joyce, of all fears of thunder and of dogs, of irregulantcy,
of punctuation and of pigeons, of this of a water-window of eyesight, of
figures in the night, of the addition of numbers in dreams, of the addition of
numbers in waking ten times three, of dots and spheres and the satisfaction of bright
tourism, of wormwood and wormweed, of miles, kilometres, and spectacles, of
world markets on transversals of the feets of all the birds, of the fantasy of
renovated words, of the fact of material barreling nowhere, of horse hooves
ebbed and square.
Produced as the ninth in the
“City Lights Spotlight Series” is American poet Lisa Jarnot’s volume of selected poems, Joie De Vivre: Selected Poems 1992-2012
(San Francisco CA: City Lights, 2013). Selecting work from her four trade
poetry collections—Some Other King of Mission (Providence RI: Burning Deck, 1996), Ring of Fire (Zoland Books, 2001; Salt Publishers, 2003), Black Dog Songs (Chicago Il: Flood
Editions, 2003) and Night Scenes (Chicago
Il: Flood Editions, 2008)—as well as four newer poems, Joie De Vivre: Selected Poems 1992-2012 presents one hundred pages compiled
from a selection of a decade’s worth of her published work. Certainly, a decade
isn’t a terribly long time, and this collection has an impressive cohesion,
given the stretch of work she had produced during that period, progressing to a
series of tighter, more compact lines. The “Spotlight Series” through City
Lights is exactly what it claims to be, and not attempting to be any kind of
all-inclusive selected, or critical volume of Jarnot’s work, especially with
the lack of introduction to provide context to the author and her work
(something I always find frustrating when absent from a selected or collected
poems).
Jarnot is very much a poet of sentences [see the piece I did on her recently in Jacket2), exploring variations on the
line through an
appreciation of older forms through the filter of “post-language,” twisting and
turning the possibilities of what might be said through what should otherwise
be straight. Through a variety of forms, the collection shows the tensile
strength of Jarnot’s writing over an extended period, and the mutability of
what can be done with the line. A number of the earlier pieces are submerged in
southern California, and eventually spread further out, from the remarkable “Hockey
Night in Canada” to “Greyhound Ode,” to “The Oldest Door in Britain,” which
includes, “O rare Ben Johnson, do you / not know strife?”
SONG
OF THE CHINCHILLA
You chinchilla in the
marketplace in france
you international chinchilla,
chinchilla of the
plains and mountains all in
fur you fur of the
chinchilla of the pont neuf,
selling wrist
watches, on the oldest bridge
of evolution that
you are, you, chinchilla,
going roadside towards
the cars, the dark arabian chinchilla
of the
neutral zone with pears, you
still life of
chinchilla, abstractions of
chinchilla, aperitif
chinchilla, lowing in the
headlands in my mind,
dark, the cliffs of dover,
dark chinchilla, tractor
of chinchilla, chili of
chinchilla, chill of the
chinchilla, crosswalk of
chinchilla of the dawn,
facilitator you, chinchilla,
foodstuffs for the
food chain dressed in light.
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