Whatever it was
the Chinese calligrapher said with her brushstrokes, it was not something she
said quickly. This stroke horizontal. Cut that into two arms with a dash
upwards of the same length blown forward by a strong wind. From the belly of
the dash, stroke down a short leg striding ahead into the wind. Branch a bold shelf
off the leg, elbowing downward to end in a hook. Finally slash upwards ramming
an iron spike between leg and hook. No good rushing, thinking of what the
brushstrokes mean or thinking of lunch or the next character. Each stroke must
signify its own speed and weight, as it carves, in the eagle's view, buffalo
pounds of white space. No use being ridiculously careful, mincing and stinting
the ink, trying to keep brush strokes alive, trying to make sure it all stands
for something, make sure it carries her away in its magic carpets from the
meaninglessness of doing nothing, of standing for nothing, promising nothing,
of promising no ticket to goodness and rightness. As though we to life are as
words to meaning, a matter of reference, we signifiers and life a distant
signified, rather than fractals of intercellular space returning like molecular
jungle-gyms in the marks of sense and frames of
mind that captivate us. As though making our mark takes place on a white
page in a vast notebook and diary that began with the big bang – each foot-print
of each member of each species recorded infinitely for each to read of each of
all of the others. And so we word-bodies walk our word legs in a language we
can't speak. We stand for our brushstrokes. We kick at tyrants. Our ink stains
resist like wax in batik. We bear scars of our spelling mistakes. We set out
each day with helmet, shield and sword – the girls we love. We can't stop.
Can't put down our pens. We'll always love how they twist away from us
fantastic windmills. We can't imagine a time when we will no longer set out, no
longer resist, no longer love to follow their rhizomatic cartwheels, to mark
our time in the arms of such siren readers.
Meredith Quartermain is a poet and novelist living in Vancouver, British Columbia. Her first book of poetry, Vancouver Walking, won a BC Book Award for poetry; Recipes from the Red Planet was a finalist for a BC Book Award for fiction; and Nightmarker was a finalist for a Vancouver Book Award. Rupert's Land: a novel is just out from NeWest Press. She is also cofounder of Nomados Literary Publishers, who have brought out more than 40 chapbooks of innovative Canadian and US writing since 2002.
the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan
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