APPROACH
i wish with
the
lightning
i’d leap like calvino said
over the
tomb
outrun
the after-dark
of
firework’s
flash
ear’s
deafness
after
the
boom
Because
I am behind on everything, I am just now going through San Francisco poet Jill Tomasetti’s full-length poetry debut, Prima Vera (San Francisco/Oakland CA: Drop Leaf Press, 2015), a collection of spare
and still lyric poems. There is such a sense of smallness, detail and silence here,
a deliberate, considered hush in her lines; “we’re smaller now / shaped by
distances,” she writes, as part of the extended poem “SEQUOIA,” a poem that
also includes the stand-alone line “stillness at the center,” a line that could
encapsulate the entirely of what this book contains. Tomaestti’s poems explore
the world and our relationships to it, attempting to engage with the wilderness
instead of trying to tame it, something evident in Northern Ontario poet Jack Davis’ more recent poetry debut, Faunics (Pedlar Press, 2017) [see my review of such here].
There
is such a respect for the wilderness in these poems, a deeply-abiding
eco-poetic that she, as narrator/writer, both explores from the outside, and
from within. The poem “SEQUOIA” ends with the brilliantly straightforward: “we
are rabbits / inside a hollow tree // and the / blackbird / opens eyes / we don’t
know about [.]” I would like to see more of her work; why does she seem to have
published little or nothing since?
BALLAD OF
OUR LADY OF SORROW
and the land will pull the water
up around her shoulders
exhibiting an inclination
for garden hats
pack a bag of coyote bush
and ice plants
i never wanted
to write it down
just to reach
reach over it
with revelry
turn it into
face-under-blanket
be still & let it ebb
with all the not-moving
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