[ToC]

 

POEMS

Larkin Higgins

Introduced by
Barbara Maloutas

Larkin Higgins' poems have a way of getting under my skin, and this without any anti-intellectualism. Her poetic mind moves through sensation and hyper-awareness into language that is precise and sliding at the same time. She goes at her work with a confidence that stakes itself against authority as if it should. This works itself out in opposition to a space and superficial ethos around her, as in "The Architect's Ruminations," when she writes—"strategic position sitting in the smallest room." I cannot help but think that "cover the tongue & groove    no wiggle room," suggests protest speech, protest against those who would rather the poem was silent or at least, brief. And so, "brevity     brightens the picture." In "Association" Higgins' poetic mind shifts between sensory memory and its loss, bringing the reader along with it and foregrounding the action in a sinuous re-reading of words standing in for those words. The use of "yet separable" in the ghazal, "Inclination," becomes an overwhelming repetition, and as in the lives of saints, it becomes the anguish of one who is a sign and so separate. The precision in the fourth brief part of the last sequence, "Precision," is embodied in her last three lines—"marble, tire/ Mars/ three all round." We cannot help but be affected by Higgins' commitment to her work if we let it, as in the last phrase of "Gesture" which as closure is a killer—"Fleshy perimeter, telltale signs, skin of sins." [BM]


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THE ARCHITECT'S RUMINATIONS

1237 18th Street
skip to foolish consequence     water-stained
one less window            mislaid
                                                bricks

 

18035 Castle Heights Drive 
castle's musty                        in need of rewiring
            [pass the solder gun   dear]
cover the tongue & groove            no wiggle room
            except the odd-yeared vibration
earthquake induced

 

3520 Military Avenue
cultivate a professional look            mention the rendition
            the last word never the last word
strategic position sitting in the smallest room
            enchanting little masterpieces     general delight
according-to-the-diagram of bluelines                                                               
            the definite            beautifully illustrated
several shades paler
            brevity                  brightens the picture                                                

 

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ASSOCIATION

Surrounded by people losing their memory memory. A woman dressed in turquoise trousers turquoise blouse carrying a turquoise umbrella. There is the man who remembers the person but not the place of the meeting. The woman who remembers the name of the person the first name wrong last name right but not the association association. The remembering of the association and not the name name the first letter of the name but not the occupation. The color of the building she met him in front of but not the address. The ficus tree by the brick steps but not the occupant. Remember him she says asks you talked to him at the symposium in Pasadena [but I know I spoke to him in Venice]. She insists and I grow silent silently worn she repeats insists repeats yes yes at the symposium but I see clearly the room where I she spoke to him. I am standing there here right now. Not in Pasadena. Insistence spinning is persuasive even as facts don't match or who who's memory is insistent isn't.


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GESTURE

Wonder if words are required. Required words, I wonder. All these.
Some seem to need words, more words. Will a gesture suffice? Curved finger or straight. Curved of curved. The hand, the raised hand, 
delicate or not. The stop gesture of stop. Upright stop, flat stop, you-can-read-my-presented palm stop or go, go with a point, 
a pointed-fingernail-extension emphatic go. Or come, closer, reader of palm lines. The lifeline curves to the palm's edge, 
page's edge, read. The most-used-worn-smooth palm of hand. Fleshy perimeter, telltale signs, skin of sins.              


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INCLINATION

[a ghazal, or leaning towards]

Parallel        one becomes        due to changeable action—yet separable
Catalytic.        Not schizo        more crystalline yet separable

foliated like pages        a layer lying over another
normally, habits create slowly        yet separable 

*

Cordyceps—a Chinese herb, improves memory        what
is proven infinitesimal        yet separable

could be proven otherwise.        A decision
must be made        communed        yet separable

* * *

Transcendence, the inclination—the aging monk
knows the deadline        fasts: meditates;        dies—separable,

the body, gutted and cleaned.        Sap (harvested like maple syrup)
from lacquer trees is now lacquer—what the monk was, yet separable:

his remains lacquer layered        painted     dried     proved
body-buddha        becomes        waterproofed, yet separable.

* * *

See "Cabeza De San Pablo"     (Queretaro)     oil upon canvas
Anomino        yet, not Paul's (yet separable)

head placed on brass platter.        Decapitated sorrow.
Brows arched in triangulation.        A quiet violence, yet separable.

Is clarity all in the head?
Two sonnets carved on cemetery wall        yet separable

by padlocked entrance gate.
Calluses cover the heart        yet separable

And Saint Vincente stands        a full body
halo of seven baby heads     floating     in an arc, separated

above his head.        Wings jut from his embroidered robes
only cloth        yet separable

the lark in living:
a wad of human hair polishes lacquered remains.


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SYSTEM

There is nothing new here
just continual
reframing

 

SUBITIZE

Three hands raise
the question
do you need more time

 

STABILITY

What rock represents
in the landscape
physics not force

 

PRECISION

marble, tire
Mars
three all round

 

 

 

 

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The language of mathematics and the language of the body are longtime fascinations.  Reading Where Mathematics Comes From by Lakoff and Núñez ignited further explorations, such as the 3-line poems. And "Gesture." And more. The combined experiences of practicing the traditional art of Vietnamese lacquer painting and viewing oil paintings in a Mexican museum became the catalyst for "Inclination."