SNOWFLAKE
CHILDREN
Using this technique,
two children can be
separated at birth
without any emotions.
So why does the
allegory survive while the
soulless creep still
walks the streets?
Near the tops of the
trees, you could nearly
make out with the ice
crystals on the branches.
Some might object to a
woman carrying a
mystery child, but we
need the freezer space.
So she knew about the
safe haven, but would
rather shoot herself
right in the stomach.
Generally, we find it
beneficial to the state
to allow individuals to
disassemble themselves.
When I reach a finality
near the ground, will I
lose some of the
individual momentum I’ve gained?
Some print outlets
might bury ice storms deep
on the weather page
choosing a new forecast.
These are striking and
radical portraits of shot
leaders defying a
Jacobin sense of liberty.
During the past decade,
Walmart has begun
to sell do-it-yourself
exorcism kits.
Republicanism emerges
as a nostalgic quest for
a return to the feudal
times of purest liberty.
He was highly ethical
in salvaging the tinkering
spirit of the wacky
antics of embryonic cells.
Vancouver poet ryan fitzpatrick’s second trade collection, Fortified Castles (Vancouver BC: Talonbooks, 2014), follows his Fake Math (Montreal QC: Snare Books,
2007) after a space of more than half a decade, and a move from Calgary to
Vancouver. After his years involved in the poetics and literary community of Calgary,
he’s been immersed in a new community of writers for some time now, and the
shift of poetic comes through in this new collection. In Fortified Castles, fitzpatrick’s poetry has evolved into a blend of
Calgary’s language-poetics and Vancouver’s social and political engagements, as
he writes to open the poem “I Hope to See You Soon”: “I was a scapegoat for the
government when all / I wanted was to wish you a safe trip. I greeted / my new
friends with a smile. I broke something / here that can be fixed in another
neighbourhood.” Through Fortified Castles,
fitzpatrick utilizes a kind of collage/cut-up method of accumulation to engage elements
of the Occupy Movement, confusion, social interactions, financial anxieties, political
uncertainties, ambiguous sentences and an endless series of phrases, consequences
and histories, managing to capture an enormous amount of activity in such
compact spaces. As he writes to open the poem “Golden Parachutes”: “What is the
maximum number of words that can / be spoken by a decapitated head on a pike?” Asked
about his new work in an interview forthcoming on the Touch the Donkey blog, fitzpatrick writes:
My second book, Fortified Castles, came directly out of
a couple one offs where I began to feed I-statements into Google (“I am so
frightened” and “I fell asleep last night” were the first couple, I think),
working with the search results. I liked the kind of material that came out so
I stuck with it, playing with the shape of the poems themselves as I went.
Working into a project from the ground up means that I work from a series of
compositional problems or questions – questions that don’t emerge without the
experimentation at the centre of doing something that doesn’t fit in a bigger
project.
Structurally,
its curious how fitzpatrick has composed two sections of poems composed in
couplet form that bookend a lengthy section of poems structured in the form of
sonnets, adding another layer of structural complication to a compositional process
of stitching together Google search results. Part of what makes fitzpatrick’s
poems so compelling is in the collage affect of his lines, forcing the full
attention of the casual listener, and allowing the careful reader to experience
multiple threads heading off in a variety of directions. As he writes to open
the poem “I Want To Break Things”: “A closed door is music to me. My apartment
is / in my name. I tense my face against the screen. / My backyard is my
sanctuary. My dentist sends / me postcard reminders. I built this fence myself.”
Given some of the subject matter the book explores, keeping the reader slightly
off-balance might be entirely the point. Given some of the subject matter, it
would seem strange to attempt to craft poems that didn’t unsettle. Perhaps we
should be far more unsettled than we are.
I
FAINT WHEN SURPRISED
The city is large and
confusing and is the only
judge I have to answer
to. The problem is with
my headphones and their
immoral, bleached-out
hucksterism. I overnight
hype on the spill I took.
Have you read the
YouTube comments? I hit my
head on the upper bunk
and my muscles lock up.
It’s weird and sucks
that I robbed you. I push
and pull at the hinges
of the improvised door.
I wake to fading stars
across my jaw. A question
mark follows my email
subject line. It’s human
rights for everyone and
there’s no difference. I mean
he wasn’t playing
around. I crossed a threshold.
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