Capitalism
Three
hundred times as heavy as our sun.
The
Bubble Observer scientists report
gurgling
and whizzing and equivocating in a ball
of
swollen crimson gas burning
like
a braintrust of firebrands and cake batter.
See
the Monthly Notice of the Royal
Astronomical Society
for
updates, they say. This jobber—R136A1—sits around the house,
a
rich tanned coot at the corner of Magellanic Cloud
and
Shalimar’s Dowry, 165,000 light years
beyond
the Milky Way.
The
CN Tower casts its ex-cathedra shadow
by day,
recently
suited in LED lights, red and purple.
With
the moxy of junior vampires,
we
sharpen our teeth on compound interest and youthful abandon;
that
is, aggregating the infrared of the city
and
taking possession even as markets make
sweet
sad plumage of our abandoned wives.
A
motive pure as sunrise, sure as sunset.
Watch
the flick of green and greedy gold on a deerfly:
a
glittering buzz we still don’t understand.
Composed with
four sections and a commentary, Toronto poet Nyla Matuk’s first trade poetry
collection, Sumptuary Laws (Montreal
QC: VĂ©hicule Press/Signal Editions,
2012) is built with the same care and craft as a European novel, discussing and
disarming both beauty and romance, even while being disappointed by both. Hers
is a poetry shaped by fact and fiction, blending science and travel with tales
of romance, tales of corruption and deep loss, and a lyric sentence. As she
writes of the peanut in “Anthropology of the Peanut”: “There is hope in you,
for the millions starving, / the supermarkets of Georgia.” If hers is a
narrative poetry, it includes only the essential elements of the story
required. Matuk writes of walking sticks (“ugly as an umbrella’s disrobing”),
reason, Barbados, An Affair to Remember,
Don Draper, Dupont Street and heroin, striking a worldly but not entirely-worn
perspective, writing poems that attempt to explore and even understand the
seeming-impossible. There are threads that continue through this collection,
from the geographies of travel, Mad Men
and various illegal substances, as though the book itself is really an
exploration of boundaries, including which can be crossed, which should be
held, and which ones aren’t actually boundaries at all. Sumptuary Laws is a book of laws, intent and consequences.
Raoul Dufy’s Secret
At
21, I switched to left-handedness exclusively.
This
ambidexterity became a naturally sequestered
practice
of loving. The right carried on
in
technë and telos: in language, and its endgame
of
unfeeling, of inescapable decrees for the world.
For
the left: greens, cadmiums, madder-pinks
off
the Norman coast. It discouraged mere depictions of depiction.
It
saw hierarchies tumbling and teetering, a bird’s
eye
roving: buildings leaning on mountains, villas on villages,
cursive
syntax of waves lifting a little boat, persons of leisure
contemplating
orange blossom vapour italicized
under
palm trees in a Nice casino garden. Sundays, on the jetty,
families
walking in seersucker finery to the pier’s
end,
little sailor suits waving to a tug,
and
further still, to trawlers with their sweatered men
of
concern and cigarillo. Near the end of my life,
it
led me to The Black Freighter, where
a
green-sketched steamship set on a black shape
enters
a harbor carrying its decamerons, centrally
composed,
assigning death a beauteous light.
At the end of
the collection, the commentaries are as lively and as entertaining as the poems
themselves, sometimes moreso, relating as small flash non-fictions within
themselves. I’d love to see what she might do with such a collection of short
pieces that bleed into each other to form something larger, some form of blend
of memoir, fiction and non-fiction commentary. As she writes of a particular
line from her poem “Lethargy”:
your old drying coat tapers to one giant
fin [P.18]
In
January, 2007, I visited some friends living in Palo Alto, California. One day,
we took the CalTrain into San Francisco and Fisherman’s Wharf. While sitting
outside the quay building eating pistachio ice cream, we observed a quantity of
brown sea lions basking in the sunshine on floating docks. They would bellow on
occasion but moved very little, remaining in close proximity to each other. My
friend said, “once a year, someone decides to take a swim in San Francisco Bay
to get closer to them, and that person is always killed by a shark. Every
year.”
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