Monday, March 5, 2018

March 1, 2018

Poets’ Roundtable 

Welcome 

News and Jabber 

What do you think about advertisers using poetry?
Here is a link to an article from adweek's website. I'm of mixed emotions about it at the moment.


Here's a sample poem:


 And here's a link to an article about the author of the poem. She's in advertising and has a Phd in literature and an MFA in creative writing.


Another useful site




This site I came across while writing a poem and wanting an adjective for atom. I just searched for adjectives for atom and came up with this list: 

How atom often is described (“________ atom”) 
single, central, neutral, asymmetric, free, excited,particular, second, isolated, heavy, individual,electronegative, normal, interstitial, smallest, nuclear,simplest, electron, third, gram, adjacent, level, additional,ultimate, original, terminal, extra, neighboring, metallic,tertiary, lightest, active, stable, mere, united, least,positive, tiny, peaceful, adsorbed, ordinary, indivisible, less,like, negative, primeval, corresponding, tetrahedral,minutest, substitutional, hydrogen, heavier, quaternary,fourth, trivalent, gaseous, typical, metastable, permanent,abstract, unstable, hetero, neighbouring, chiral, magnetic,hydrogenic, tiniest, displaced, bound 


You can also get all these related words: 




Who do you think wrote this? 
Canto 1 

My childhood’s home I see again, 
    And sadden with the view; 
And still, as memory crowds my brain, 
    There’s pleasure in it too. 

O Memory! thou midway world 
    ‘Twixt earth and paradise, 
Where things decayed and loved ones lost 
    In dreamy shadows rise, 

And, freed from all that’s earthly vile, 
    Seem hallowed, pure, and bright, 
Like scenes in some enchanted isle, 
    All bathed in liquid light. 

As dusky mountains please the eye, 
    When twilight chases day; 
As bugle-notes that, passing by, 
    In distance die away; 

As leaving some grand waterfall, 
    We, lingering, list its roar— 
So memory will hallow all 
    We’ve known, but know no more. 

Near twenty years have passed away 
    Since here I bid farewell 
To woods and fields, and scenes of play, 
    And playmates loved so well. 

Where many were, how few remain 
    Of old familiar things; 
But seeing them, to mind again 
    The lost and absent brings. 

The friends I left that parting day, 
    How changed, as time has sped! 
Young childhood grown, strong manhood gray, 
    And half of all are dead. 

I hear the loved survivors tell 
    How nought from death could save, 
Till every sound appears a knell, 
    And every spot a grave. 

I range the fields with pensive tread, 
    And pace the hollow rooms; 
And feel (companion of the dead) 
    I’m living in the tombs. 

        Canto 2 

But here’s an object more of dread 
    Than ought the grave contains— 
A human form with reason fled, 
    While wretched life remains. 

Poor Matthew! Once of genius bright, 
    A fortune-favored child— 
Now locked for aye, in mental night, 
    A haggard mad-man wild. 

Poor Matthew! I have ne’er forgot 
    When first, with maddened will, 
Yourself you maimed, your father fought, 
    And mother strove to kill; 

When terror spread, and neighbours ran, 
    Your dang’rous strength to bind; 
And soon, a howling crazy man 
    Your limbs were fast confined. 

How then you strove and shrieked aloud, 
    Your bones and sinnews bared; 
And fiendish on the gazing crowd, 
    With burning eye-balls glared— 

And begged, and swore, and wept and prayed 
    With maniac laughter joined— 
How fearful were those signs displayed 
    By pangs that killed thy mind! 

And when at length, tho’ drear and long, 
    Time soothed thy fiercer woes, 
How plaintively thy mournful song, 
    Upon the still night rose. 

I’ve heard it oft, as if I dreamed, 
    Far-distant, sweet, and lone— 
The funeral dirge, it ever seemed 
    Of reason dead and gone. 

To drink its strains, I’ve stole away, 
    All stealthily and still, 
Ere yet the rising God of day 
    Had streaked the Eastern hill. 

Air held his breath; trees, with the spell, 
    Seemed sorrowing angels round, 
Whose swelling tears in dew-drops fell 
    Upon the listening ground. 

But this is past; and nought remains, 
    That raised thee o’er the brute. 
Thy piercing shrieks, and soothing strains, 
    Are like, forever mute. 

Now fare thee well—more thou the cause, 
    Than subject now of woe. 
All mental pangs, by time’s kind laws, 
    Hast lost the power to know. 

O death! Thou awe-inspiring prince, 
    That keepst the world in fear; 
Why dost thou tear more blest ones hence, 
    And leave him ling’ring here?

Written by  Abraham Lincoln



A poem by one  of the Parkland School survivors:
Parkland freshman turns to poetry to ease her pain

Tragedy strikes in the middle of English class on Valentine's day. 17 students and teachers were massacred in a Parkland high school. 
Anne Geggis Anne GeggisContact Reporter
Sun Sentinel


Her best friend died sitting next to her. Three other classmates in the same room also perished. So Eden Hebron has turned to poetry.

The 14-year-old daughter of Igal and Nicole Hebron, has written a poem about how her wholesome, all-American world dissolved into a national tragedy.

Eden, a lifelong Parkland resident, has been taking voice lessons since the age of 4, but now can’t even bear the sound of music.

“I can’t eat … I can’t talk to my friends. My life is a mess right now,” she said.

She started writing poetry a month ago. And writing this has eased the pain a little, she said.

“It helps organize what happened in my mind,” she said.



“We walked into class together and sat down.

It was Valentine’s Day in our sweet Parkland town.

We were laughing and doing our work, me and my best friend.

But little did I know that 5 minutes later, her life would come to an end.

I hear a sound. One. Two. Three. Four. Five.

Gunshots? That’s funny Alyssa, of course, we will survive.

We live in Parkland I thought, how could this be?

But sometimes your thoughts are not what you see.”

We run under the table in disbelief.

I have my friends next to me, what a relief.

They move to the desk to seek safer shelter.

But I stayed there, thinking the sound was just bad weather.

I close my eyes and wait for my teacher to say it’s a drill.

But before I knew it, our door was shot through and I saw his first kill.

Elaina, Alex, Justin, then Alyssa.

I’m next and this is not just paranoia.

He went to the next floor and the next.

All I could think about is, how many will be left?

The screams blasting in my ear.

The blood still won’t disappear.

I scream their names, call for my friends.

Nothing else to do, they are gone, they are dead.

Didn’t think I would live my worst nightmare.

I kept hearing shots and seeing gunpowder in the air.”“I run home and check the news.

How could you do this Nick Crus?

More and more I find out died.

I wish this didn’t happen, and he never got inside.

No feelings, no emotions

How can you comprehend this traumatic distortion?

There are no words to describe, nothing else to say

That will justify my English class on Valentine’s Day


Also, check out this video of a student reading his poem with inserted news video:


The Current Assignment 

This song theme prompted at least two of us to an exchange. I often write a cluster of  poems around a theme or topic. This time, after writing a reasonably good piece, I began riffing on "Rave ON!" by Buddy Holly. Gerard went on a tear on "Begin the Beguine" and we started writing back and forth. I ended up with at least five poems that form a sort of long poem  of five parts that refer to "Rave On!" and look at my relationship with the muse, the act of writing., I hadn't expected so much. 

The Next Assignment 
Tanka: Poetic Form

The Japanese tanka is a thirty-one-syllable poem, traditionally written in a single unbroken line. A form of waka, Japanese song or verse, tanka translates as “short song," and is better known in its five-line, 5/7/5/7/7 syllable count form.

One of the oldest Japanese forms, tanka originated in the seventh century, and quickly became the preferred verse form not only in the Japanese Imperial Court, where nobles competed in tanka contests, but for women and men engaged in courtship. Tanka’s economy and suitability for emotional expression made it ideal for intimate communication; lovers would often, after an evening spent together (often clandestinely), dash off a tanka to give to the other the next morning as a gift of gratitude.

In many ways, the tanka resembles the sonnet, certainly in terms of treatment of subject. Like the sonnet, the tanka employs a turn, known as a pivotal image, which marks the transition from the examination of an image to the examination of the personal response. This turn is located within the third line, connecting the kami-no-ku, or upper poem, with the shimo-no-ku, or lower poem.

Many of the great tanka poets were women, among them Lady Akazone Emon, Yosano Akiko, and Lady Murasaki Shikibu, who wrote The Tale of Genji, a foundational Japanese prose text that includes over 400 tanka. English-language writers have not taken to the tanka form in the same way they have the haiku, but there are several notable exceptions, including Amy Lowell, Kenneth Rexroth, Sam Hamill, Cid Corman, and Carolyn Kizer.

There are many excellent anthologies of Japanese verse, most of which feature lengthy selections of tanka. Rexroth’s translations, which include One Hundred Poems from the Japanese and One Hundred More Poems from the Japanese, are considered classics, and The Ink Dark Moon: Love Poems by Ono no Komachi & Izumi Shikibu, translated by Jane Hirshfield with Mariko Aratani, continues this tradition.

read examples of the tanka:

A Spray of Water: Tanka [one narcissus]
Tada Chimako

one narcissus
draws close to another
like the only
two adolescent boys
in the universe

Tanka Diary [Awakened too early on Saturday morning]
Harryette Mullen, 1953

 Awakened too early on Saturday morning 
by the song of a mockingbird 
imitating my clock radio alarm.
                *

Walking along the green path with buds 
in my ears, too engrossed in the morning news
to listen to the stillness of the garden.




Edward Hirsch also writes about the tanka in his book A Poet’s Glossary (Harcourt, 2014): 

tanka: Also called uta or waka. The character for ka means “poem.” Wa means “Japanese.” Therefore, a waka is a Japanese poem. Tan means “short,” and so a tanka is a short poem, thirty-one syllables long. It is unrhymed and has units of five, seven, five, seven, and seven syllables, which were traditionally printed as one unbroken line. In English translation, the tanka is customarily divided into a five-line form. The tanka is sometimes separated by the three “upper lines” (kami no ku) and the two “lower ones” (shimo no ku). The upper unit is the origin of the haiku. The brevity of the poem and the turn from the upper to the lower lines, which often signals a shift or expansion of subject matter, is one of the reasons the tanka has been compared to the sonnet. There is a range of words, or engo (verbal associations), that traditionally associate or bridge the sections. Like the sonnet, the tanka is also conducive to sequences, such as the hyakushuuta, which consists of one hundred tankas.



The Next Meeting 
The next meeting will be on Thursday, March 15, 2018. 
Other Jabber 










Friday, February 16, 2018

Februaty 15, 2018

Poets’ Roundtable

Yesterday's meeting was excellent. Many thanks to Ed for his block on publication. The reading afterward was refreshing in that we just read without discussion. Then too it will be refreshing to get back to a little discussion at the next meeting. 

Welcome

All that I have to offer is Ed's outline for yesterday's remarks. It's an excellent guide for going about the publishing process. It also emphasizes the work involved. It is not an easy job. My biggest challenge has always been a reluctance to step away from the writing to do the work of getting published. Oh the challenge of being an unknown great American writer.

News and Jabber


N.B. Follow the links below. They should be live. EG

Getting Published:
(Suggest a stable of twenty or more poems before launching into this.)
1. Identify the poems you want to publish. Proofread carefully. Are they literary? General interest? Genre?
2. Decide level of acceptable difficulty-elite, difficult, possible, easy.
3. Review the resources available to find publications. (Duotrope, Submittable, Submissions Grinder, Poets & Writers, etc.)
4. Identify the magazines/anthologies you want to send to.
5. CAREFULLY read the guidelines and follow them, even if they’re stupid.
6. Submit. If simultaneous submissions are allowed, submit the same poem to three or four publications. Nine out of ten subs (give or take) will be rejected. Don’t take it personally.
7. Keep a log of submissions-date, to, poem, outcome. Publications which accept a poem are more likely to accept the next one you send them.
8. If more than five or six rejections are received for a poem, consider revising it, it may be a stinker. Or you may be pitching it to the wrong markets.
9. If no success after dedicated effort, consider finding a heartless reader who will point out the flaws in your pearl. Revise and resubmit.
10. Success. Remember to thank the editor by name, and put your success out on social media. Poetry doesn’t pay, so don’t expect money.


The Current Assignment

The Next Assignment

Write about a favorite song, why it is a favorite. What happens when you hear it?

The Next Meeting


The next meeting will be on Thursday, March 1, 2018 from 1 to 2:30 PM.

Other Jabber








Saturday, February 3, 2018

February 1, 2018

Poets’ Roundtable


Welcome


News and Jabber


Here is a link to an article/obituary of Nicanor Parra, Chilean poet who died on January 23, 2018 at the age of 103. He wrote what he called anti-poetry. This is stripped-down verse, somewhat in response to the broad lyricism of Pablo Neruda and other South American poets.


Neither too bright nor totally stupid

I was what I was. A mixture

Of oil and vinegar

A sausage of angel and beast.


I Take Back Everything I’ve Said - Poem by Nicanor Parra


Before I go

I’m supposed to get a last wish:

Generous reader

burn this book

It’s not at all what I wanted to say

Though it was written in blood

It’s not what I wanted to say.

No lot could be sadder than mine

I was defeated by my own shadow:

My words took vengeance on me.

Forgive me, reader, good reader

If I cannot leave you

With a warm embrace, I leave you

With a forced and sad smile.

Maybe that’s all I am

But listen to my last word:

I take back everything I’ve said.

With the greatest bitterness in the world

I take back everything I’ve said.


— translated by Miller Williams 

A.R. Ammons's complete works has just been released. He's a good man to look up every now and then. Here, in my first ever embedded video, is a discussion with him. It runs 25 minutes. The link immediately below is to a review of the book. 

http://www.latimes.com/books/jacketcopy/la-ca-jc-ar-ammons-20180105-story.html


Still

A. R. Ammons, 1926 - 2001


 I said I will find what is lowly
and put the roots of my identity
down there:
each day I’ll wake up
and find the lowly nearby,
a handy focus and reminder,
a ready measure of my significance,
the voice by which I would be heard,
the wills, the kinds of selfishness
I could
freely adopt as my own:

but though I have looked everywhere,
I can find nothing
to give myself to:
everything is

magnificent with existence, is in
surfeit of glory:
nothing is diminished,
nothing has been diminished for me:

I said what is more lowly than the grass:
ah, underneath,
a ground-crust of dry-burnt moss:
I looked at it closely
and said this can be my habitat: but
nestling in I
found
below the brown exterior
green mechanisms beyond the intellect
awaiting resurrection in rain: so I got up

and ran saying there is nothing lowly in the universe:
I found a beggar:
he had stumps for legs: nobody was paying
him any attention: everybody went on by:
I nestled in and found his life:
there, love shook his body like a devastation:
I said
though I have looked everywhere
I can find nothing lowly
in the universe:

I whirled through transfigurations up and down,
transfigurations of size and shape and place:

at one sudden point came still,
stood in wonder:
moss, beggar, weed, tick, pine, self, magnificent
with being!

From The Selected Poems: 1951-1977, Expanded Edition, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. Copyright © 1986 by A. R. Ammons.


The Current Assignment

I did this early on and haven't stopped considering my drafts since. I have a number of things ongoing and did not expect this to take over. I found the assignment a trifle more interesting than I first imagined.

The Next Assignment

As we pull out of our various manifestations of SAD, an assignment that has some weight to it. In front of a mirror, write a self-portrait. Do not use a photograph or a recollection of how you think you look. Rather, be in front of a mirror as you write.  Look and see. I include here two translations of Rilke's "Salf-Portrait" and another by Frank Bidart which is  patterned on Rilke's. Consider this quotation from Rilke's "Advice to a Young Poet":
"go into yourself and see how deep the place is from which your life flows"


Self-Portrait 

     by Rainer Maria Rilke (EG note, age 31)


The bone-build of the eyebrows has a mule's

or Pole's noble and narrow steadfastness.

A scared blue child is peering through the eyes,

and there's a kind of weakness, not a fool's,

yet womanish -- the gaze of one who serves.

The mouth is just a mouth . . . untidy curves,

quite unpersuasive, yet it says its yes,

when forced to act. The forehead cannot frown

and likes the shade of dumbly looking down.

A still life, nature morte -- hardly a whole!

It has done nothing worked through or alive,

in spite of pain, in spite of comforting . . .

Out of this distant and disordered thing

something in earnest labors to unroll.

Self Portrait

The steadfastness of generations of nobility
shows in the curving lines that form the eyebrows.
And the blue eyes still show traces of childhood fears
and of humility here and there, not of a servant's,
yet of one who serves obediantly, and of a woman.
The mouth formed as a mouth, large and accurate,
not given to long phrases, but to express
persuasively what is right. The forehead without guile
and favoring the shadows of quiet downward gazing.

This, as a coherent whole, only casually observed;
never as yet tried in suffering or succeeding,
held together for an enduring fulfillment,
yet so as if for times to come, out of these scattered things,
something serious and lasting were being planned.


Translated by Albert Ernest Flemming 
Rainer Maria Rilke

Self-Portrait, 1969 (EG note, age 30)

BY FRANK BIDART

He's still young—; thirty, but looks younger—
or does he? . . . In the eyes and cheeks, tonight,
turning in the mirror, he saw his mother,—
puffy; angry; bewildered . . . Many nights
now, when he stares there, he gets angry:—
something unfulfilled there, something dead
to what he once thought he surely could be—
Now, just the glamour of habits . . .
                                                                 Once, instead,
he thought insight would remake him, he'd reach
—what? The thrill, the exhilaration
unravelling disaster, that seemed to teach
necessary knowledge . . . became just jargon.

Sick of being decent, he craves another
crash. What reaches him except disaster?

Frank Bidart, "Self-Portrait, 1969" from In the Western Night: Collected Poems 1965-1990. Copyright © 1997 by Frank Bidart. Used by permission of Farrar, Straus & Giroux, LLC, www.fsgbooks.com. All rights reserved.

The Next Meeting

Other Jabber




Tuesday, January 23, 2018

January 18, 2018

Poets’ Roundtable


Welcome

It has been a short time but it's good to see you anyway.

News and Jabber




TS Eliot prize goes to Vietnam-born US poet for debut collection Night Sky With Exit Wounds
Two years after Hong Kong-born Sarah Howe became first poet to win the prize with debut collection, Ocean Vuong repeats the feat; at a London ceremony, the chairman of judges hails ‘the definitive arrival of a significant voice’


7 Jan 2018
After becoming the first literate person in his family and a prize-winning poet festooned with awards, Vietnam-born Ocean Vuong has now won perhaps his most prestigious accolade yet for his debut collection: the TS Eliot prize.

Reflecting on the aftermath of war over three generations, the collection, Night Sky With Exit Wounds, has already landed 29-year-old Vuong the Forward prize for best first collection, as well as the Whiting and the Thom Gunn awards.

I’m always trying to look for words inside words. It’s so beautiful to me that the word laughter is inside slaughter
The book has also been critically acclaimed, with Observer critic Kate Kellaway describing it as “a conduit for a life in which violence and delicacy collide”, and The New York Times’ Michiko Kakutani praising Vuong’s “tensile precision reminiscent of Emily Dickinson’s work, combined with a Gerard Manley Hopkins-like appreciation for the sound and rhythms of words”.

Vuong is only the second debutant poet to win the TS Eliot prize, two years after Hong Kong-born Sarah Howe became the first, winning for Loop of Jade in 2016.

Ocean Vuong reads from Night Sky With Exit Wounds


Before announcing Vuong as the winner at a ceremony at the Wallace Collection in London on Monday, chair of judges Bill Herbert called Night Sky With Exit Wounds “a compellingly assured debut, the definitive arrival of a significant voice”.

Vuong was the only non-white poet in the running for the prize.
“There is an incredible power in the story of this collection,” said Herbert. “There is a mystery at the heart of the book about generational karma, this migrant figure coming to terms with his relationship with his past, his relationship with his father and his relationship with his sexuality. All of that is borne out in some quite extraordinary imagery. The view of the world from this book is quite stunning.”

Hong Kong-born poet’s TS Eliot prize win ‘will change British poetry’
The cover of Vuong’s Night Sky With Exit Wounds.

Vuong was selected as the winner by judges Herbert, James Lasdun and Helen Mort from a 10-strong shortlist, which was initially criticised by some for its lack of diversity. Vuong was the only non-white poet listed, in a year when several poets of colour had been nominated for and won other big poetry prizes.

Born in Ho Chi Minh City, Vuong spent a year in a refugee camp as a baby and migrated to America when he was two years old, where he was raised by his mother, grandmother and aunt. Two aspects of Vuong’s life – his sexuality and the absence of his father – recur in his work, with several poems evoking Greek myth to explore the roles of fathers and sons.

“Western mythology is so charged with the father,” he told The Guardian in 2017. “Personally, I’m always asking who’s my father. Like Homer, I felt I’d better make it up.”

Hong Kong-born Sarah Howe, winner of the TS Eliot prize two years ago. Photo: Dickson Lee
Vuong, who now lives in the US state of Massachusetts and works as an assistant professor in the Master of Fine Arts programme for poets and writers at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, only gained a taste for poetry in his 20s. He initially put together Night Sky With Exit Wounds for a competition that promised personal rejection to all entrants.

“I said, ‘Oh my, a personal rejection. Maybe that’ll give me some tips and push me back out there with a better idea,’” Vuong has recalled – but he received a publishing deal instead.

Hong Kong writers have much to say – and not just about democracy and politics
After winning the Forward prize, Vuong told The Guardian that he suspected dyslexia runs in his family, but felt it had positively affected his writing. “I think perhaps the disability helped me a bit, because I write very slowly and see words as objects. I’m always trying to look for words inside words. It’s so beautiful to me that the word laughter is inside slaughter.”

To mark the 25th anniversary of the prize, Vuong received £25,000 (US$34,500) – up from £20,000 last year – and will feature on a special UK postmark issued by Royal Mail.

Vuong joins a prestigious list of previous winners, including Don Paterson, Ted Hughes, Sharon Olds and Carol Ann Duffy, and will also be the first poet inducted into the new TS Eliot prize winners’ archive, which has been established to preserve the voices of winning poets online for posterity.

The prize was founded by the Poetry Book Society in 1993 and is now run by the TS Eliot Foundation.

Eurydice
By Ocean Vuong

It’s more like the sound
a doe makes
when the arrowhead
replaces the day
with an answer to the rib’s
hollowed hum. We saw it coming
but kept walking through the hole
in the garden. Because the leaves
were bright green & the fire
only a pink brushstroke
in the distance. It’s not
about the light—but how dark
it makes you depending
on where you stand.
Depending on where you stand
his name can appear like moonlight
shredded in a dead dog’s fur.
His name changed when touched
by gravity. Gravity breaking
our kneecaps just to show us
the sky. We kept saying Yes—
even with all those birds.
Who would believe us
now? My voice cracking
like bones inside the radio.
Silly me. I thought love was real
& the body imaginary.
But here we are—standing
in the cold field, him calling
for the girl. The girl
beside him. Frosted grass
snapping beneath her hooves.




Jenny Joseph: 'I shall wear purple' poet dies

16 January 2018

The sun has burst the sky

Because I love you
And the river its banks.

The sea laps the great rocks
Because I love you
And takes no heed of the moon dragging it away
And saying coldly 'Constancy is not for you'.
The blackbird fills the air
Because I love you
With spring and lawns and shadows falling on lawns.

The people walk in the street and laugh
I love you
And far down the river ships sound their hooters
Crazy with joy because I love you.


Jenny Joseph


Here is the link to the article about her:

"When I am an old woman I shall wear purple
With a red hat which doesn’t go, and doesn’t suit me.
And I shall spend my pension on brandy and summer gloves
And satin sandals, and say we’ve no money for butter.
I shall sit down on the pavement when I’m tired
And gobble up samples in shops and press alarm bells
And run my stick along the public railings
And make up for the sobriety of my youth.
I shall go out in my slippers in the rain
And pick flowers in other people’s gardens
And learn to spit.

You can wear terrible shirts and grow more fat
And eat three pounds of sausages at a go
Or only bread and pickle for a week
And hoard pens and pencils and beermats and things in boxes.

But now we must have clothes that keep us dry
And pay our rent and not swear in the street
And set a good example for the children.
We must have friends to dinner and read the papers.

But maybe I ought to practice a little now?
So people who know me are not too shocked and surprised
When suddenly I am old, and start to wear purple."

Jenny Joseph, whose poem Warning was twice voted Britain's favourite poem, has died at the age of 85.

It is perhaps best known for its opening lines: "When I am an old lady I shall wear purple / With a red hat that doesn't go, and doesn't suit me."

Despite it being about old age, Joseph was in her 20s when she wrote it.

She wrote several poetry and prose collections, the most recent being published in 2009. Joseph died earlier this month after a short illness.

'One of best-loved poets'
Born in Birmingham, Joseph studied at the University of Oxford and went on to work as a newspaper reporter, pub landlady and lecturer.

Her agents described her as "one of Britain's best-loved poets".

Warning was voted Britain's favourite modern poem in 2006 - having previously been named the nation's favourite post-war poem 10 years previously in a BBC poll.

It went on to inspire the launch of the Red Hat Society - a women's group whose members wear purple, accessorised with a red hat.


However, the success of the poem is said to have annoyed Joseph, according to her publishers Bloodaxe Books.

"At the same time, she was delighted that it had been translated into numerous languages and was known throughout the world," they said. "What she disliked most was that this early poem written in her 20s overshadowed the rest of her work, which was largely concerned with the duality of existence...

"She viewed her poems as attempts to present 'how things work' at the core, at the edge."

'New ways of telling stories'
Joseph was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1999 and won the James Tait Black Prize for fiction for her work of prose and verse Persephone. She had previously won the Cholmondeley Award for her second poetry collection, Rose in the Afternoon.

She also had work published with Enitharmon Press. Its director Stephen Stuart-Smith, who worked with her on 2009's Nothing Like Love, described that last collection as "exploring a wide range of literary forms, new ways of telling stories, and demonstrating her skill in introducing cadences and everyday speech into the lyrical movement of her verse.

"As a person and as a poet she was warm and witty, as a friend loyal and supportive, as a performer entertaining as well as unpredictable."

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The Current Assignment


3/5/3/3/7/5 is a total of 26 syllables, shorter than a tweet. I started by lifting lines of the right length from another couple of poems of mine. This didn't work but did prompt me to start experimenting with the words I had chosen. The result wasn't bad.


The Next Assignment

The next assignment is to write an anti-Valentine's Day poem. Make it serious, or not. Any form, any topic as long as it connects in some way to Valentine's Day. Here is a link to the wikipedia entry for Valentine's Day: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valentine%27s_Day.

The Next Meeting


The next meeting will be on February 1, 2018.

Other Jabber


The South African Poet Laureate Keorapetse Kgositsile died recently. He is a pot worth checking on. Here is one of his poems.



CASSANDRA WILSON WILL SING
                             - Poem by Keorapetse Kgositsile


Let me sense the chaos
I will respond
with a song
why else 
was I 
born
says Jimi of the purple haze 
through Kalamu ya Salaam

Now look, at those eyes
look at her arms 
follow her little finger

I wonder what
Jean Toomer who could see
the Georgia Pike growing
out of a goat path
in Africa
would say about
Cassandra Wilson tonight

Perhaps Cassandra
does not even sing.
Here of course a voice there is
possessed by music like the rest of her
her whole body is song
her whole body has sensed the chaos

I say look at those eyes 
look at her arms
follow her little finger 
and understand perhaps why 
you were born with ears 


Keorapetse Kgositsile

And here is a link to Cassandra Wilson singing "Fragile": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTsOyV0k4QU


Thursday, January 11, 2018

January 11, 2018

Poets’ Roundtable


Welcome

We'll meet both today and next Thursday so I'll make the assignment short, or maybe not.

News and Jabber

The last couple of meetings have, while fun, devolved into too many competing conversations, sometimes at the expense of whoever was trying to read. I counted twice when we had three distinct conversations going on around the table at the same time, all while someone was waiting to read. Let's return to a more attentive respect to the reader and the poem. We'll all be the better for it. I take this new year moment to remind you too of the words of my good friend, former Director of The Robert Frost Center for the Performing Arts, Don Sheehan, that when the choice is between intelligence and compassion, choose compassion and the result will be a higher intelligence. I also remind myself and you that we critique poems, not poets. 


Don remains one of the few saintly men and women I have been privileged to know. This picture is from a review of a collection of his essays. It is a religious work but I urge you to check out the review since the language in it is the very language this wonderful, gentle man used when he spoke. 
Here is the link: http://myocn.net/grace-incorruption-selected-essays-donald-sheehan-orthodox-faith-poetics/

 A quotation from the article:  “...the ruining oppositions of actual experience are held within the musical disciplines of lyric art...”  Don believed this simply, beautifully and lived accordingly.

The Current Assignment

This assignment was somewhat of a revelation to me, something I'll get to when we read. I suspect many of you had fun with it. I didn't so much have fun as I made a discovery-- a re-discovery really-- as a by-product of the project. 

DaCosta Muckenfuss...I still await a second response from him on Facebook. He has confirmed that he did basic training in 1968 at Fort Jackson Related image so  I'm certain I have found him.

The Next Assignment

Write a Shadorma:


I recently discovered a poetic form called shadorma (thanks to P.J. Nights via Tammy Trendle) that I had no record of in my two poetic form handbooks [kind of like my recent posting about hay(na)ku]. Shadorma is a Spanish 6-line syllabic poem of 3/5/3/3/7/5 syllable lines respectively. Simple as that.


Also, you can link multiple shadorma (shadormas? shadormae?) like in my example below:


“Miss Shadorma”


She throws birds
at the school children
on playgrounds
made of steel
who run intense spirals to
the chain-link fencing.


Sad teachers
watch as they spiral
into air
like reverse
helicopter seeds searching
for their maple trees.

The Next Meeting

The next meeting will be one week from today on January 18, 2018.

Other Jabber

Although Richard Wilbur died in October, 2017, and I spoke of him then and included a remembrance from some other source, in a recent (January 10, 2018) edition, The Times of London printed an excellent piece on him that has brought me to reconsider my somewhat cool attitude toward his writing. One of the quotes I like is:


"Wilbur’s Walking to Sleep opens thus:

As a queen sits down, knowing that a chair will be there,

Or a general raises his hand and is given the field-glasses,

Step off assuredly into the blank of your mind.

Something will come to you."

This is how I write. 

Here is a link to the article:

And, consider this poem:

First Snow in Alsace

The snow came down last night like moths
Burned on the moon; it fell till dawn,
Covered the town with simple cloths.

Absolute snow lies rumpled on
What shellbursts scattered and deranged,
Entangled railings, crevassed lawn.

As if it did not know they'd changed,
Snow smoothly clasps the roofs of homes
Fear-gutted, trustless and estranged.

The ration stacks are milky domes;
Across the ammunition pile
The snow has climbed in sparkling combs.

You think: beyond the town a mile
Or two, this snowfall fills the eyes
Of soldiers dead a little while.

Persons and persons in disguise,
Walking the new air white and fine,
Trade glances quick with shared surprise.

At children's windows, heaped, benign,
As always, winter shines the most,
And frost makes marvelous designs.

The night guard coming from his post,
Ten first-snows back in thought, walks slow
And warms him with a boyish boast:

He was the first to see the snow.


Several things to note about the poem:
Rhyme scheme, very tight.
The almost drowsy texture against the fury of war
The age of the soldier-- it is not given but we know him to be young
The presence of the children in a war zone, both as civilians and soldiers
The presence of beauty draped over the scene
"Absolute snow" implying absolution
The presence of white, a heavenly cover
The chilling feel when the poem is done.
The contrast between the last line and the 14th and 15th lines, which come at the center of the poem.




Sunday, December 24, 2017

December 21, 2017

Poets’ Roundtable


Welcome


News and Jabber

I don't go through Christmas without reading "A Child's Christmas in Wales." Here is a link to the entire thing, which, at 3016 words won't take long to read. 


And here is a link to Dylan Thomas reading it, recorded in 1952:



The Current Assignment

I have seen several poems for this assignment and they are terrific.

The Next Assignment

Write a humorous poem, one to help mitigate SAD (seasonal affective disorder)

The Next Meeting

Other Jabber





Monday, December 11, 2017

December 7, 2017

December 7, 2017

Poets’ Roundtable


Welcome


News and Jabber

A strong contender for the most brutal rejection letter (pictured) of all time has been found, almost 90 years after it was written


 


https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/northern-ireland/us-poet-first-holder-of-fellowship-in-seamus-heaney-legacy-project-36384969.html

Mark Doty has just been chosen the first holder of a fellowship in the Seamus Heany Legacy Project. I haven't been a long-time fan of Doty but find him growing on me.

And here's a poem by Mark Doty:


Golden Retrievals

BY MARK DOTY


Fetch? Balls and sticks capture my attention

seconds at a time. Catch? I don’t think so.

Bunny, tumbling leaf, a squirrel who’s—oh

joy—actually scared. Sniff the wind, then


I’m off again: muck, pond, ditch, residue

of any thrillingly dead thing. And you?

Either you’re sunk in the past, half our walk,

thinking of what you never can bring back,


or else you’re off in some fog concerning

—tomorrow, is that what you call it? My work:

to unsnare time’s warp (and woof!), retrieving,

my haze-headed friend, you. This shining bark,


a Zen master’s bronzy gong, calls you here,

entirely, now: bow-wow, bow-wow, bow-wow.


Mark Doty, “Golden Retrievals” from Sweet Machine: Poems. Copyright © 1998 by Mark Doty. Reprinted with the permission of HarperCollins Publishers.

Source: Sweet Machine: Poems (HarperCollins Publishers Inc, 1998)


The Current Assignment

Who did it? I found it challenging and actually more interesting than I expected it to be. The result is lengthy since it doubles the length of the original. Nonetheless, a worthy exercise, at least for me.

The Next Assignment

As the song says, "Watch out, Sally!"


The assignment is to write a Christmas poem but without any verbs.


The assignment is to write a Christmas poem but without any verbs.
It can be done.:
“In a Station of the Metro”
By Ezra Pound, 1885 - 1972
The apparition of these faces in the crowd;
Petals on a wet, black bough.
“memoir without verbs”
a challenge
Snow
a crystal touch on a baby’s face
four feet of white across a frozen land
purple moon shadows under pines
diamonds on tree limbs in the morning sun
weapons for school boys
walls in the school yard
my tracks across a field and those of a hare
a hundred telephone poles along my way to school
After deep winter’s darkness
spring lake
and summer field
acres of riches
the black earth
dust
dust
and yellow harvest
combines
tiny harvest mice
The table full:
potatoes, pumpkin, corn, beans , cabbage, strawberries, saskatoons, blue berries,
raspberries, choke cherries, pincherries, cranberries, carrots, turnips six inches across, bitter horseradish, beets.
Time for the fall supper
November snow

Don’t overlook haiku as verbless verse.

The Next Meeting


The next meeting will be on December 21, 2017. Same time, same place.

Other Jabber

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/01/books/review/poetry-children.html


An article from the NYTimes about how we became interested in poetry caught my attention. It's worth pondering as we find ourselves getting more and more into free verse, that is, the un-rhymed, and why we love to hear those poems that retain the charm of good, old-fashioned verse like that GraceMary writes.


An excerpt from the article:


"The most remarkable thing about poetry’s unpopularity isn’t that it exists, but that it exists in the wake of a period in which poems were not merely popular, but embraced with a fierce and unembarrassed joy. That period, of course, is childhood. For children, the questions often asked about poetry’s status are so beside the point as to seem almost absurd. Can poetry matter? Obviously, say more than 850,000 copies of “Goodnight, Goodnight Construction Site,” among many, many other rhyming best sellers. Can poetry be widely recited and remembered? Indubitably, say half a million nightly tours of a great green room containing mittens, kittens, a bowl full of mush, and a quiet old lady who is whispering “hush.” Can a poem be overtly instructive while still being worthwhile as poetry? Well, “a person’s a person, no matter how small,” says a determined elephant named Horton. If adult poetry sometimes seems to exist in the shadow of fiction and music, children’s poetry more than holds its place in the sun."


and this:


"Because we are returned to the peculiar fact that, for all its allure to children, poetry is a game most adults left behind long ago. And it is fascinatingly alone among the arts in this respect: If children love fiction, music and drama, their parents frequently do as well. There are many reasons for this situation, as there are for all complex cultural phenomena. But it’s interesting to think about the handful of poets who do have adult readers outside the academy — Frost, Eliot, Bishop, Dickinson — and to observe how easy it is to imagine them writing children’s poems (as Eliot in fact did in “Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats”). Is there a lesson for poets in that? Here is Eliot in “Little Gidding”:


We shall not cease from exploration

And the end of all our exploring

Will be to arrive where we started

And know the place for the first time.

Through the unknown, unremembered gate

When the last of earth left to discover

Is that which was the beginning;

At the source of the longest river

The voice of the hidden waterfall

And the children in the apple-tree …


Do we read this for its intellectual complexity? Or because it sounds mesmerizing? “We read it for both,” most people would answer, and this is perhaps true. But it can be easy to forget the ungovernable, un-footnoteable attraction of sound. It can be easy to forget that this, more than anything else, is what first draws us to poetry, before we become wise enough to think less of it, before we put away childish things."