The first word was a
noun
The first thing was a
box It was needed
The first feeling was a
pre- A preposition
It was in Before
there was anyone
Before there was any
thing An in
There
really needs to be more work by Lesley Yalen books out in the world; who do we
need to convince so that will happen? She was good enough to send a copy of her
chapbook the beginning in (minutes
BOOKS, 2011), a title I wasn’t aware of until very recently, part of a 2011
season of minutes BOOKS chapbooks that included titles by Eric Baus, Geoffrey
Olsen, Sam Lohmann, Jacqueline Waters, Matvei Yankelevich, Taryn Andrews, Ben
Fama, Corina Copp and Lewis Freedman. Why haven’t I heard of this press prior
to this? Yalen’s the beginning in is
structured as a single, ongoing sequence of untitled short lyric fragments,
held one to a page over nearly thirty pages of text. Less structured as a
straightforward narrative, Yalen’s poem does build up in swells, rising and falling
away in turns, allowing the flow of the lyric itself to navigate where the poem
moves in a sure, steady path. Through returning repeatedly to multiple
beginnings, she writes of endings, the structure of cities and the creation of
something else, and something more. “The end will be more of a prism and less
of a rainbow,” she writes, somewhere in the middle of the sequence. Later on,
writing: Skip ahead quite a lot through ages of wood and carbon, metal and
velvet [.]” In her poem, lines build upon lines upon pages, shaping into
something scattered and formed, yet returning, inevitably, to that origin
point. This work reminds slightly of Robert Kroetsch, who revelled in play on
beginnings, from the tantric delay to a return to origins. And so, to begin
again.
An adjective created
the city. It crept into the city. It found the spots for licking salt and
slaking thirst.
blue, large, vast,
crowded, comfortable, jagged, damp, prior, connected, close, aquamarine, alone,
fearsome, fierce, ripe, violet, even, terrible, loud, surprising, shaken,
hushed, poised, pregnant, aflame, aligned, faded, tired, visible, awake, old,
important, dear, and all their opposites
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