Listening
This animal
air
made to
make
some sense
from sound
the pre-linguistic
muscle
of words
held still
by this splint
of attention.
Occasionally
a book of poetry appears, seemingly out of nowhere, that is openly discussed
between poets as a ‘must read’ well before any reviews or notices have
appeared, as is the case with poet Jack Davis’ remarkable debut, Faunics (St. John’s, NL: Pedlar Press,
2017). Faunics owes a debt to Nelson Ball and Mark Truscott, both of whom are acknowledged, both as notes at the end
of the collection as well as individual dedications, for their influences upon his
work. Because of this, Davis’ poems aren’t merely short or short-lined, but
poems that fully comprehend the lessons of what Ball and Truscott (and others,
including jwcurry, Cameron Anstee, Michael e. Casteels) and others have been
working on for years (it might be worth pointing out that Anstee, also, has a debut collection set to appear very soon), writing an incredibly precise lyric
of sustained attention.
Patterns
of replacement
a seed’s
genius passed
through birds
by pitch
filch & gut
assaying
their
selves.
Davis
engages in what has been referred to as “quietude,” an incredibly detailed
attention to smallness, silence and lines as short as a single word. Nearly one
hundred and forty pages thick, Davis’ Faunics
is smallness multiplied and magnified, composed of short, intricate and dense
lyric poems that weave their ways through language, space and multiple species
of birds, animals and fauna. He writes of listening, sparrows, asides, winter
and counterweights, attending to his most immediate and intimate in ways both
startlingly familiar and completely refreshing. As he writes to open the poem “Curtail”:
“All beautiful / of pieces // every flesh / desired // found breath / our
bodies // the broken-into warmth / of animals [.]” There is such a deep and
abiding respect and attentiveness in these pages, in which he attends far more
to his Northern Ontario surroundings than to the facts, or even the distractions
of, his own presence. As he writes to open the poem “Edible Forests and Potable
Waterways of Northern Ontario”: “Music / pushed through / flax & pigment /
played into / other woods [.]”
Set
in four sections – “Living Daylights,” “Animal Light,” “The Pre-Linguistic
Heights” and “Voir Dire” – Faunics
exists as a sketchbook of poems on nature, a distant cousin to the 19th
century botanical book, as done by such as Virginia Woolf and Catherine Parr Trail, but one composed out of language, a fauna of sound and meaning in the
sharpest detail, and the smallest possible space. This is easily one of the
finest and most understated collections I’ve read in a long time.
1 comment:
I'm a bit late to be thanking you, Rob, for articulating part of what makes "Faunics" the must-read book it is. I adore this book. Each time I recommend it to someone, I send them to your blog (saves me trying to explain).
Martha
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