I give in. I don’t give in. There is a physical
choice to either give in, or not give in.
I give in, physically, but later realize that I
haven’t
given in, marginally. I know I am the only one
who
has given in, partially. In that I am – was –
the
only person who sundered before giving in.
Where sheets assume the momentariness of a
sleeping
body, the image produced is not of a body
sleeping but of
my passing through an unchanged space. Not of a
body
sleeping, but that which cannot leave its mark
as it passes
through. The marks I leave are those of a body
desiring: a
bed I have slept in, and something I have
desired to ass
through. I leave this mark no longer extant –
once I have
passed through. Or once it has passed through
me.
I am not dissatisfied with having been
momentary – that is,
being physical. I value the possibility of an
end being physical.
I value the physical because when it ends I can’t
follow.
Having given it, I want only to give it again. In
giving it, I act
upon inevitability, forgoing all I desired to
pass through. (“PEЯFACT”)
Montreal-based
poet Nicole Raziya Fong’s debut full-length poetry title is PEЯFACT (Vancouver BC: Talonbooks,
2019), “a three-part series of poems interrogating the nature of experience,
language, trauma, and identity.” Fong writes on being in, of and beyond the
body, seeking a centre from which to find ground. “To desire,” she writes, in
the title section, “is to sustain a way of living. I desire to sustain a /
living whose ends are my own.” The prose poem sequences of the title section, that
opens the collection, are composed out of a lyric, rhythmic breath of sentences,
one that compels the ear to listen as much as the sound of it soothes. And yet,
Fong’s text (throughout the collection, as well as specifically within this
poem/section) moves through both the thinking and physical body, between the
self and the other, between contemplation and action—occasionally paired,
linked, impossibly joined and impossibly separate—writing into the periphery,
exploring the between-ness of possibility.
I visualized the noon of trees. I visualized a
dense, sinuous
river. I counted the signs I passed. I visualized
a change
of pace. I paced ahead, encountering extend. I visualized
water rushing in from the point of
indifference. I visualized
words cut from their meanings, pacing
numerically
between longing and extent. I counted the
minutes before
that person would return. I visualized lag. I visualized
an outline cast in resolution. I counted the
number of
remaining people. I visualized their approach,
their
imprint demarcating the remembered from the
real.
I graze the surface of life. Life is endured,
not experienced.
Were I to experience life, its exterior would
no longer
induce extent. Exterior would transform into
atmosphere,
daylight, rain – protective at a distance, but
not absolute.
For a while the possible was at hand.
The
second section exists as the text of an impossible play, staging characters
such as “a prime number,” “subterranean time,” “culpability” and “neutrality”
alongside “STORM,” “WIND,” “RIVER” and “STAGE,” all of whom play themselves. As
the character “R,” otherwise known as “subterranean time,” speaks: “Sweet
waters fold, sweet waters fold over broad banks of tamarind and teak. What appears?”
In the notes she ends the collection with, she writes that this section
[…] is an attempt to enclose or lay bare
trauma. Exchanges occur. These exchanges are sensorial, imagined, real. Each leaves
a binding mark upon the subject. When one speaks, giving voice to the
unspeakable, the mind undergoes change, the boundaries between inner and outer
fragmenting before seeking a return to resemblance. The choices made in the
text are meant (however imperfectly) to indicate this indeterminate porosity.
And
the third section, “MINE,” is composed as a sequence/suite, a single
poem-section constructed in lyric fragments. As the first section sets the
foundation for her thinking, the second section pulls that apart, and providing
both an abstract and something more concrete, until the third section, set not
as ending but an expression of conclusion, collusion and collision, writing the
bookend of the collection, as she writes:
i am just as convinced and doubtful
as i am perplexed and beautiful
i want to give and take what i can
as i am able
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