Wouldn’t measuring,
with index finger and thumb, the slight wall between the anal cavity and the
vaginal cavity of a woman require a more fixed and intimate understanding of
not only the body, but possibly the methods one has of imagining space? Circling
this line of thought down to a moment of establishment in the ear ever so long
ago would have the effect of a cold towel on him as he sits with legs and arms
crossed, breast folded into knees so that making himself small would in turn enlarge
everything which is not him.
I’m
curious about the floating, meditative, lyric accretions that make up North
Carolina poet Lance Phillips’ Mimer (Boise
ID: Ahsahta Press, 2015). This is his fourth poetry collection, after Corpus Socius (2002), Cur Aliquid Vidi (2004) and These Indicium Tales (2010), all of
which have been published by Ahsahta Press. The prose poems and lyric fragments
that make up Mimer manage to hold together
so easily and seamlessly that it would appear that Mimer is less than a poetry collection than a single, extended,
fragmented lyric, composed across an enormously broad canvas. His “Author
Statement,” included as part of the press release, includes:
I think of the book as
a collection of parables, but in the sense that Crossan uses the term, as
disrupters. Parables are meant to attack the status quo, to enact the “kingdom
of heaven” on earth, to speak metaphorically. A parable is an orgasm, or so I take
it to be, which allows the body to arrive at its own disruption. Those disruptions
present authentic reality.
Constructed
in four sections, two of which, themselves, break down further into
poem-sections, there is something of the collage in his lyric mediations,
playing off each other like cards, not entirely sure where they are headed, but
seeking out and searching, constantly, for comprehension. This is a book that
can be opened at any point to begin reading, and read in any direction. Through
the prose-poem, there is something in Phillips’ work of Phil Hall’s bricolage and lyric koan, approaching wisdom through accumulation, consideration and the
pause, itself on the very edge of hesitation.
He was dumbfounded at
the minutiae, at the sheer will of that process which seemed to force his hand
with regard to the graph. Prius, he could call his mind there in the diffuse
light. Primus, which painted the walls and added grain to the floorboards;
Primus, the sense made of the marks on the graph, the sense of imagining to
speak; Primus, whatever animal heart was a scourge to him in his socks and deep
in memory. Goose-pimples all the while he was repositioning the graph on the
ceiling and all the while he wrote Primus
over the outline of his body as a continuous barrier, dipping and rising in
small letters and touching the horizon of skin just as a hand in the sea.
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