because it does not hum where it turns
because it does not ring like glass
because it does not sound in diapason
because it does not want to let things stray
because it tries to bind all things
because it wants to gather them to music
because it blinds all creatures into believing
they might for a wisp of light slow the protein
it is not love but proportion
holds them together
keeps them from flying
apart
keeps them
from
having
to leave
yet of attraction what are we to speak
if it were not for repulsion
we would pass through empty space
pass right through one another
it is only repulsion lets us near
With
his latest collection of poetry, departures
(Winnipeg MN: Turnstone Press, 2016), Winnipeg poet, editor and critic Dennis Cooley [see my 2015 piece on him in Jacket2 here] explores “his own mortality” following a health crisis. As the online
catalogue copy for the book reads: “Recovering in hospital after a burst
appendix, plagued by hallucinations and poisonous mistrust, Dennis Cooley
retreats to memories of ancestors and of his rural Saskatchewan roots, in departures, his 20th book of
poetry.” As the collection opens: “then, Winnipeg, hospital, / the Victoria,
jumbled, / didn’t know / where or when [.]”
Regular
readers of Cooley’s work have long been aware of his expansive book-length projects,
each constructed around a set of specific ideas, themes or subjects, composed
as collaged-manuscripts that stitch and weave their punning and playful ways,
whether writing on the foundations of civilization against his prairie in the stones (Turnstone
Press, 2013) [see my review of such here], his late mother in Irene
(Turnstone Press, 2000), vampire lore, literature and legend in Seeing Red (Turnstone Press, 2003), the
alphabet-play of abecedarium (University
of Alberta Press, 2014) [see my review of such here] or the histories and legends of Manitoba outlaw John
Krafchenko in Bloody Jack (Turnstone
Press, 1984; Edmonton AB: University of Alberta Press, 2002). What becomes
curious, the further Cooley releases poetry collections, is the subtle
evolution of his book constructions, as each collection of poems is held
together through structure, theme and ideas, some of which are quite clear, and
others, far more subtle. While earlier collections might have functioned more
as collaged or quilted sequences, departures
manages to exist as, deliberately, a more fragmented (and even, seemingly
random) suite of predominantly-untitled poems, sketches and reports, as well as
being held very close together through his ongoing meditations and inquiries,
medical reports and retellings, and tweaks and quirks of language only Cooley
could construct. He writes: “They enact procedures. Reduce bandages, extract
tubes. Ease / the hooks, unflesh lures and barbs. Cut off the brightness, /
little by little lift him off. un-net him onto water. Leave the / knife by his
side.” Further, playing off the abbreviation “DNA” against “Canada,” writing a
lovely, only-Cooley riff that even references, ever slightly and slyly, the
work of another:
and Megan
and Diane
and Dana
so also an an
a nada under
can ada among
the canaanites
known also as phoenicians
who found themselves lost
at sea at a loss for words
In an interview with Jonathan Ball (dated 2003; posted 2010), Cooley talks of some
of the construction of his poetry collections:
Most, if
not all, of your collections are organized around a theme, concept, or
semi-narrative, though you delight in diverting yourself from this loose
“topic.” What is it that you find attractive about these conceptual threads,
and why do you indulge yourself in digressing to such a great degree in the
published work?
For me, it’s a way of generating texts. It
gives me a site to research, to see what the possibilities are; there’s a kind
of focus in thinking about a terrain, saying, “what can be done in this area.”
I find it really generative, and because it works so well for me I always
recommend it to others. Find a site, and then play off it to see what the
possibilities of it might be. If you write a balloon poem, well, maybe you’re
interested in doing a series, and maybe this extends into a notion of flying
things, or rubber things, or symbols of innocence, or whatever—you often find
all sorts of things by accident.
I got into the Dracula poems because I was
writing a series of fairy tale poems, some of which became Goldfinger, and as I was reading and working there I thought, okay,
well, what else might I write? and I thought of Dracula and how he was sort of
a fantasy figure, and I wrote a Dracula poem, which I don’t think is in the
collection now because I willfully pulled it, because there’s just so much
stuff to draw from. So I wrote that and I found myself writing a bunch of
Dracula pieces, they just went on and on and on, I started about 1989 I think.
departures is a collection of, as
the copy says, “hallucinations and poisonous mistrust,” but also a meditative
exploration of big ideas attached to a health crisis, setting his thematic
boundaries and then routinely crossing them, writing his health and his
history, and multiple points both aside and between. “It is not fibrous,” he
writes, “there are no veins or threads. It is smooth but it is not shiny or
slick. It glows it seems with its own light, light green to yellow, shape of a
rootless molar. A gumdrop.” He continues:
A
phosphorescent gland, green and golden very deep he follows down, a bit slough
in Saskatchewan seven or eight feet deep. He can feel it pulse. He can almost
see through it.
Another
time an old computer, hot and smelling, in oil and huzz. It contains occult
lore, formulae, health records.
Towards
the end of the collection, he writes: “Cooley re-enters / the coiled and
calling world / carries with him / a slashed and bulging stomach. […] his
appendix / has up & left him / he will not miss it / one little bit [.]” In
Cooley’s hands, books can percolate and expand for years before seeing print,
with some earlier fragments of the collection appearing in his sunfall: new and selected poems 1980-1996
(Toronto ON: Anansi, 1996). Just how long ago did his appendix actually burst?
Look. There’s the man in the moon.
His dad holds him up in his right arm.
Do you see the man in the moon?
No, he said, the small boy said, disappointed.
He could not see him.
He tried hard but he could not
see the man in the moon.
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