Change is comfortable
for those looking to buy it. To find a reason to wake up in the morning. My
house has beautiful light, tall windows. I could last here forever. The snow
makes everything brighter than before; this doesn’t mean the future holds
rewards. I’m trying to reamplify my trust in the living. But my past is much
more fertile than today, maybe because the hills in California stay green infinitely.
Or because my brothers are there, still hugging and wrestling their
differences. It’s difficult to be here, without them judging me. It makes me
feel less infinite.
There
is something particularly striking about the prose poems in Brooklyn, New York poet Paige Taggart’s second trade poetry collection, Or Replica (Brooklyn NY: Brooklyn Arts Press, 2014). Composed in
four sections—“Mammalian Half,” “Sorry as the Flame for No Other Fire,” “Gift
Horse” and “Say Yes Will Still Go”—she switches from sections of lyric
fragments (one and three) to prose poems (two and four). While the lyric
fragments are intriguing, it is through the prose poems where her work really
shines. Throughout the collection, Taggart is concerned with the copy, the duplicate
and ideas of possible “falseness,” as she writes in “Mammalian Half”: “a
hula-hoop without hips / is just a circle / painted with gouache / a circle of
table salt / casualties spilled / forth [.]” There is such an intriguing way
that the phrases in her short fragments play off each other, accumulating into
something larger than the sum of their parts, whereas the density of the prose
poems are somehow far more effective, sharpening the focus of those
disconnections and accumulations, and causing each piece to strike with the
force of a body-blow.
Memory is weird. I’ve
given so many blowjobs. One on a tiny square patch of grass behind a Parisian
club just as the sun was coming up. I recently took all my photos down—was
tired of no longer identifying with them. I keep rolling around the possibility
of starting to smoke pot again, to stave-off nightmares—attention to detail
fully depletes around a self-revolving door of no consequence. Dreams arrive
through an empty vessel. Memory is weird and frequently ignored. I wonder what
it’d be like to spend a life passing over Braille.
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