Tell
Me How
Composed
by Buddy Holly, January 24, 1986, for his wife Maria Elena Holly, on the
occasion of his flight home from New York after his induction into the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame. Originally published in the liner notes for Buddy Holly’s
Greatest Hits: Volume 3. MCA, 1988.
“It’s magic!” squeals
the boy across
the airplane’s aisle,
his explanation
for flight. I couldn’t agree
more, returning
to you. Each day,
during this week apart,
I was a dark-trapped
rabbit
eager to be revealed to
the vast
applause of your smile.
Tell me, how magic
is the airplane in
making possible
this trick? How
airplane-like is magic
with the flights of its
surprise?
How upward lifting are the tricks
How upward lifting are the tricks
you perform? With a
wave of your hand,
you transform all that
ever was
for us and will be,
every moment
in parting and mile
apart, into the now
of our first and last
touch
and every touch
between.
It
would be easy to feel overwhelmed by the expansive montage that makes up
Toronto poet and critic Daniel Scott Tysdal’s third poetry collection, Fauxccasional Poems (Fredericton NB:
Goose Lane Editions / icehouse poetry, 2015). Following his first two
collections—Predicting the Next Big Advertising Breakthrough Using a Potentially Dangerous Method
(Regina SK: Coteau Books, 2006) and The Mourner’s Book of Albums (Toronto ON: Tightrope Books, 2010)—Tysdal’s poems in Fauxccasional Poems are a wonderfully playful mix of pop culture,
philosophy, historical detail, classical forms and tabloid parlance, much of
which exist as framing for a series of lyric narratives that twist, cajole and even
contain the occasional surreal shift. Tysdal composes sonnets, pantoums and
other structured forms on subjects as diverse as the Taliban, Kermit the Frog, Buddy
Holly, Nicholas Cage and T.S. Eliot. However playful and even outrageous at
times his subject matter and framings might be, the poems themselves are classically
formed, managing an intriguing blend of formal experimentation within highly conservative
structures. Through his experimentation, Tysdal shows himself to be very much
an admirer of the very forms he twists and collides, allowing new life and
breath into structures that so rarely allow for the possibility of real
experimentation. In this, for example, one could compare his work to that of
Montreal poet David McGimpsey [see my recent piece on him in Jacket2 here].
Sleepless, I watch the
clip of myself on my iPad,
the girls pressed tight
as a pair of tires to the chassis
of my arms. Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein
plays chaste scares on
the hotel’s flat screen. Sasha
“Da-ad!”s me into
muting the NBC affiliate’s segment
on our Detroit campaign
stop. I don’t need sound
to know the hope my
image labours to radiate:
“One hundred years ago
this very day, in this great
city, hardworking
Americans like you built the first
Model T. The prodigious
Mr. Henry Ford called it
the car ‘for the great
multitude.’ What we need
to build together
today, with the same fearlessness
and determination, is a
better America for us all,
the still great
multitude.” Even a glimpse
of the blueprints my
image pretends to possess
would help me sleep, or
a glance at Ford’s ancient plans.
Was it from ruins or
raw material that he fashioned
new parts? Did he
invent a new vehicle for the people
or from his creation
were a new people cast? (“Detroit City Meets the Invisible Hand”)
Each
poem is composed through a very distinct “voice” and for a particular purpose,
including “Ballad composed on the
occasion of the founding of the First Church of the Free Follower Fellowship,”
“Composed by T.S. Eliot in April of 1926
on the occasion of the fifth anniversary of the first War of Art victory by ‘The
Waste Land,’” “Sestinaiku composed on
the occasion of the seventieth anniversary of the Enola Gay’s refusal to drop
an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan” and “Recorded by war activist John Lennon in protest of the seventy-five
years of involuntary global peace imposed at the end of the Great War.”
Utilizing historical facts and figures, Tysdal’s deliberate twists and shifts
in composing poems for occasions that, for the most part, could never have
existed, is a curious set of “what ifs,” writing out the possibilities had a
particular point in history turned one way, say, instead of another. His use of
“voice” (composing poems that claim composition by another) is reminiscent,
also, of some of the work by Ottawa poet Stephen Brockwell [see my recent interview with him in Jacket2 here], whether
in his most recent collection, Complete Surprising Fragments of Improbable Books (Toronto ON: Mansfield Press,
2013) [see my review of such here] or his prior collection, The Real Made Up (Toronto ON: ECW Press,
2007). One might wonder what Tysdal is exploring through such faux occasions
and historical fictions, but for what the best of speculative fiction writers
could ever hope to articulate: a way to see through into the present with fresh,
critical eyes.
There
is something quite charming in the way that Tysdal composes his speculative
fictions, even through his notes at the end of the collection that continue to
perpetuate his created facts. There is almost a sense of Tysdal exploring
history, just as much as poetic form, through his speculations of it. As he
writes:
“Shell”: This poem is
often misread as a response to the assassination of Jacqueline Kennedy. However,
such a reading is not possible. “Shell” was composed a full year before
November 22, 1963, and published four months before that tragic day. Not surprisingly,
conspiracy-minded critics have read “Shell” as Munroe’s attempt to warn Jackie
of her impending assassination, a plan Munroe knew about, these critics argue,
due to her mob connections.
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