SELF
ASSESSMENT
Already we need
hay to fill
our effigies.
The silence
of the heart
undermines
the body
which moves
in habit.
Put something
in it & leave
it to leaven.
It will rise like
the chimney
that stands
after the house.
The
poems that make up Massachusetts poet and publisher Brian Foley’s debut trade
poetry collection, The Constitution
(Black Ocean, 2013), move in a series of rhythmic hesitations and pauses
through explorations of awareness. In the title poem, he writes: “With you
scrib- / bled beside me / I don’t know / who I’m not. / Awareness is / just
punishment.” He writes in a cadence with echoes of San Diego poet Rae Armantrout’s work, but with the combined explorations of both internal and external
landscapes, and how the two are intricately linked. His poems seem to skim and
bounce like stones across the water, hiding far deeper, more subtle depths
through a remarkably deceptive simplicity. As the back cover suggests, Foley
does work to question what we might take for granted, as even his lines
unsettle, shifting an appearance of sentences that break down into phrases that
collide and accumulate, forcing connections that might otherwise remained
impossible in such a short space. As he writes in the poem “HERE DOES NOTHING”:
“It would not take gun- // point to fit me into / a simple question, // a
chance more de- / finite than ever I was // worth, not knowing / gone came
earlier.” Through his series of small collisions, there is a wonderfully
vibrant sense of wordplay and pun that underscore each poem, one that exists as
a series of wry gestures, from the poem title “You Are On Fired,” to the
opening of the poem “THE BIRTHDAYS,” that reads: “children per- / forming
parents / photo albums // reach / their image / & cease / existing[.]” Composed
in a series of lyric meditations, The
Constitution is remarkably cohesive for a first collection of short lyrics,
and one can enter anywhere in the book and get at least an idea of the larger
portrait, without giving too much away. Throughout, The Constitution works to deliberately evolve, and even unsettle, questioning
and updating, from the early inclusion of the title poem, followed throughout
the collection by a series of “Amendments,” including:
AMENDMENT
trouble is
resemblance
performs
an autopsy
pronounces me
out of body
then nothing
fits back in as it did
before it was
taken out
the bones I know
hunt for me
in someone else’s rind
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