| A Score for Tourist Movies If music plays with film then film is an illustration of music's movement. Snap, blast, sever, sever, stop. Even the dog twitching his ears.
If islands nestle in the ocean, and a statue rises above the pilgrim, then we are standing on a cliff and the pilgrim has reached her goal. The light is as pale as the back of her hand.
If the dancers twitch arrythmically their dance is only partly kept. At twenty-four frames per second, film makes a lonely memory. They sway staccato, staggered, stretched.
If drums repeat the pace of film's slip through the gate, then the song's refrain retells film's fades and cutaways. Even its night-quiet darks.
If horns evoke an antique joy, lens flares and close-ups send their renderings into red relief. How has mankind managed grief? Light, noise, movement, breath.
If blood is to the body as film is to the camera, if film is a flat and lucid eye, if light is a perishable gift, then the night is the gate of the dark.
If light falls away with always then film is a parcel of rest. Panoramas, linked and strung as castle-steps, lawns, the fine iron bars of the castle gate.
If drums pace the beat of blood and film is the speed of the rattle of breath, then the dancers have truly escaped us. We slow as they quicken. We go and go. |
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Copyright © 2013 by Mary Austin Speaker. Used with permission of the author. |
About this Poem: "'A Score for Tourist' Movies was written after watching this compilation of tourist films that someone strung together and paired with the Beirut album, Rip Tide. The two are obviously unrelated, but I was struck by the way film's flickery rhythm has this way of expressing nostalgia not only for a bygone medium, but for a slower, more deliberate way of seeing. To pair these with music that also has a nostalgic gloss--as much of Beiruit's music does, with its marching--band horn section and steady drums--is to create something very poetic that seems to rescue a piece of the past--of an elegant, bygone empire, perhaps--that seems like it has otherwise slipped away. There is something painful in this recognition--that we ourselves will slip away like the tourists who made these films--our shaky hands, our points of view, the idiosyncratic memories we take away from vacation. So I wrote this poem, which may, as tourist movies do, outlive me, too. I should also mention there's a nod to "The Waking" by Theodore Roethke in the seventh stanza. Roethke died in 1963, around the time I suspect these films were made. I have never been able to stop hearing his music."
Mary Austin Speaker |
Poetry by Speaker Ceremony |
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| | | Mary Austin Speaker is the author of Ceremony (Slope Editions, 2013) and the chapbooks The Bridge (Push Press, 2011) and 20 Love Poems for 10 Months (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2012). She has also written a play, I Am You This Morning You Are Me Tonight, written with her husband, the poet Chris Martin. She lives in Iowa City, IA. | Related Poems by Chris Martin by Frank O'Hara by Marianne Boruch |
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