Sunday, February 10, 2019

February 7, 2019

Poets’ Roundtable


Welcome

Ed Ahern will not be with us today. 

News and Jabber



The Current Assignment




Illusion. It became an interesting topic, not least because I stumbled two days ago across an essay by Emerson that I had never read before, titled "Illusion." It opens with a poem:



Illusions  


Flow, flow the waves hated, 
Accursed, adored, 
The waves of mutation: 
No anchorage is. 
Sleep is not, death is not; 
Who seem to die live. 
House you were born in, 
Friends of your spring-time, 
Old man and young maid, 
Day's toil and its guerdon, 
They are all vanishing, 
Fleeing to fables, 
Cannot be moored. 
See the stars through them, 
Through treacherous marbles. 
Know, the stars yonder, 
The stars everlasting, 
Are fugitive also, 
And emulate, vaulted, 
The lambent heat-lightning, 
And fire-fly's flight.
When thou dost return 
On the wave's circulation, 
Beholding the shimmer, 
The wild dissipation,

And, out of endeavor 
To change and to flow, 
The gas become solid, 
And phantoms and nothings 
Return to be things, 
And endless imbroglio 
Is law and the world, -- 
Then first shalt thou know, 
That in the wild turmoil, 
Horsed on the Proteus, 
Thou ridest to power, 
And to endurance.

And the final paragraph reads:

The young mortal enters the hall of the firmament: there is he alone with them alone, they pouring on him benedictions and gifts, and beckoning him up to their thrones. On the instant, and incessantly, fall snow-storms of illusions. He fancies himself in a vast crowd which sways this way and that, and whose movement and doings he must obey: he fancies himself poor, orphaned, insignificant. The mad crowd drives hither and thither, now furiously commanding this thing to be done, now that. What is he that he should resist their will, and think or act for himself? Every moment, new changes, and new showers of deceptions, to baffle and distract him. And when, by and by, for an instant, the air clears, and the cloud lifts a little, there are the gods still sitting around him on their thrones, -- they alone with him alone.

Read the entire essay at this link: http://transcendentalism-legacy.tamu.edu/authors/emerson/essays/illusion.html

 Notice how the poem is echoed by Dru's poem and how the style is similar to that of MarLou's in her recent poems.


Unpublished work Copyright 2019 Emerson Gilmore

The Next Assignment


The next assignment is to write a poem about the street you grew up on.

The Next Meeting


The next meeting will be two weeks from today, February 21, 2019

Other Jabber

For you Valentine's Day pleasure:

somewhere i have never travelled,gladly beyond
somewhere i have never travelled,gladly beyond
any experience,your eyes have their silence:
in your most frail gesture are things which enclose me,
or which i cannot touch because they are too near
your slightest look easily will unclose me
though i have closed myself as fingers,
you open always petal by petal myself as Spring opens
(touching skilfully,mysteriously)her first rose
or if your wish be to close me,i and
my life will shut very beautifully,suddenly,
as when the heart of this flower imagines
the snow carefully everywhere descending;
nothing which we are to perceive in this world equals
the power of your intense fragility:whose texture
compels me with the colour of its countries,
rendering death and forever with each breathing
(i do not know what it is about you that closes
and opens;only something in me understands
the voice of your eyes is deeper than all roses)
nobody,not even the rain,has such small hands
— E.E. Cummings (1894-1962), from Complete Poems:1904-1962,
ed. George J. Firmage, Liveright Publishing Corporation, 1979






Monday, January 21, 2019

January 17, 2019

Poets’ Roundtable


Welcome

Ardeth is down with a cold and will not be here today. She did send a poem which most of you have probably seen and which we will read as we will Dru's submission as well. Welcome to an honored guest today.

News and Jabber


https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/jan/14/a-star-is-born-ts-eliot-prize-goes-to-hannah-sullivans-debut This link will take you to the Guardian article about this year's winner of the TS Eliot prize, Hannah Sullivan. Her details are in the article along with names of four other contenders for the prize. I urge you to check out all the poets mentioned. We should always be reading other poets, known and unknown. 

Here is an excerpt ferom the winning book:

The following is extracted from Hannah Sullivan’s debut collection, Three Poems, which was announced the winner of the T. S. Eliot Prize for Poetry.
__________________________________
All summer the Park smelled of cloves and it was dying.
Now it is Labor Day and you have been sleeping through a rainstorm,
Half aware of the sewage and frying peanut oil and the ozone
Rising in the morning heat, and the sound of your roommate hooking the chain,
Flipping ice cubes into a brandy balloon, pouring juice over them,
Ruby Sanguinello, till they giggle, popping their skins. The freezer throbs.
He has been beating a man he met on Craigslist, he has been dreaming:
Old New York, a James novel, a Greenwich Village Christmas,
A certain kind of frost in the Meatpacking District, and the smell of the carcasses
Dull with the tang of freezing blood beside the skip of the Hudson wind.
You have been thinking of the building opposite at night, the lights
Going off one by one, a diminished Mondrian, one ochre square
Where a woman undresses for the city, stroking her puffy thighs.
You hear him talking on the phone about you, his ‘petite innocente’.
All summer you have been eating peaches from the greenmarket.
Overripe in September they need to rest in the icebox, sitting with their bruises.
All summer you have been dreaming of Fall and its brittle confection of branches.
__________________________________
From Three Poems. Used with permission of Faber & Faber. Copyright © 2019 by Hannah Sullivan.




Hannah Sullivan
Hannah Sullivan
Hannah Sullivan studied Classics at Cambridge, received her PhD in English from Harvard in 2008, and taught as an Assistant Professor at Stanford. Her study The Work of Revision, which examined how modernist approaches to rewriting shaped literary style, was published in 2013 and awarded the Rose Mary Crawshay Prize by the British Academy. She is an Associate Professor of English at New College, Oxford. Three Poems(Faber, 2018) is her first poetry collection.

Look at the language, the unusual, the penetrating. I'll bet she knows her words: cloves, for example:


clove (countable and uncountable, plural cloves)

(uncountable, countable) A very pungent aromatic spice, the unexpanded flower bud of the clove tree.
(countable) A clove tree, of the species Syzygium aromaticum (syn. Caryophyllus aromaticus), native to the Moluccas (Indonesian islands), which produces the spice.
(countable) An old English measure of weight, containing 7 pounds (3.2 kg), i.e. half a stone. 

From Middle English clove, an alteration of earlier clowe, borrowed from the first component of Old French clou de girofle, from Latin clāvus (“nail”) for its shape. Also see clāva (“knotty branch, club”).

Check out, too, this link from Harper's Bazaar: https://www.harpersbazaar.com/uk/culture/culture-news/a25891884/hannah-sullivan-wins-the-ts-eliot-prize-for-poetry/


The Current Assignment

This assignment took me to places unexpectedly and I finished with about 20 pages, much of it not so good, and a couple of decent lines. It also brought me to the best chat I've had with one of my sisters in many years. Not that we're not friendly but rather it got her to pause and reflect when her tropism is talk incessently. Anyway, there have been a number of important porches in my life.

The Next Assignment


"All the people we used to know are an illusion to me now." Write  a reflection on that line from Bob Dylan's "Tangled up in Blue." Here's a link to the song:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X4OHOGMeNOM. It's from "Blood on the Tracks," one of my favorite albums.In the assignment, feel free to change "people" to "things."

The Next Meeting


The next meeting will be on February 7, 2019 from 12:30-2 PM.

Other Jabber





Monday, January 7, 2019

January 3, 2019

Poets’ Roundtable


Welcome

I don't have any word on absentees and I do have word that Rich Anderson will be back today.

News and Jabber


The Washington Post reviews The Best American Poetry of 2018https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/how-do-you-define-authenticity-a-poetry-collection-explores-a-modern-problem/2019/01/02/2225ea6a-0e0b-11e9-84fc-d58c33d6c8c7_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.577faada0677. Edited by Dana Gioia, whom you have heard me speak of, and David Lehman, it's another in a series of annuals with the same name. Read it for the quotations from the poems and note the language, the poetic language. It is different from other language. We spoke last time about what makes poetic language  poetic. These examples will help you understand it.  

An excerpt:   their themes are — surprisingly, unsurprisingly? — traditional: By Gioia’s estimate, the top five are family, childhood and adolescence, love, poetry itself and, not least, nature and the environment, this last usually focusing on its despoliation rather than daisies and daffodils. Gioia emphasizes that most of the work he selected was written before the last presidential election, but he does include Christian Wiman’s “Assembly” — “It may be Lord our voice is suited now/ only for irony, onslaught, and the minor hierarchies of rage” — and Ernest Hilbert’s “Mars Ultor”:

Brutes push their way to power,

But the muddiest barbarian

Also wants the throne an hour,

And dons a crown, marks affairs,

Nods under a golden branch until

A stronger one turns up the stairs.

Even more stark is Agnieszka Tworek’s “Grief Runs Untamed” about impoverished exiles who carry a door handle: “they attach it to every mountain and wall,/ hoping the handle will conjure the door/ That will open and let them in.”

The great test of any poem is simply “Would I like to learn this by heart?” Alas, nothing here quite merits that reward, though Dick Davis’s autumnal reflections in “A Personal Sonnet” come close. Still, many poems offer striking phrases worth remembering. In “American Dreams,” Julia Alvarez recalls a childhood candy store and its “tinkling bell that tattled I was coming in the door.” That “tattled” is inspired. Having fled the Dominican Republic, Alvarez found America to be not a land of milk and honey but “the land of Milk/ Duds, Chiclets, gumdrops.”

In “Those Were the Days” George Bradley plays off old sayings, upending proverbs into a subspecies of what Harry Mathews dubbed perverbs: “Seamstresses back then were many and available and kept us in stitches”; “Clothes made the men and unmade the women.” J. Allyn Rosser’s “Personae Who Got Loose” proffers a similar litany of wry non-sequiturs: “Aloof, wary, notwithstanding her giddy enthusiasm for handsome misogynists and fine crystal.”

And check out this article:
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/07/books/review/craig-morgan-teicher-we-begin-in-gladness.html which discusses how a poets' lives evolve. By Craig Morgan Teicher. The title comes from Wordsworths's lines: “We Poets in our youth begin in gladness; / But thereof come in the end despondency and madness.” 






The Current Assignment

Who did it? I found it difficult to get into it at first, largely, I think due to the seasonal stuff that never seemed to stop. Today I got into it, early this AM, after working on it subconsciously overnight.


The Next Assignment


The next assignment is to write a poem about a porch or porches or prompted by a porch or porches.

The Next Meeting

The next meeting will be on Thursday, January 17, 2019 (oddly enough it is Johnny Krawiec's birthday.

Other Jabber

Robert Frost wrote this masterpiece in about 20 minutes. It belongs to all of us now.
‘Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening' is part of a huge cache of copyrighted works entering the public domain on New Year’s Day.
By Steve Hendrix January 1

Whose words these are I think I know.

I think you know, too.

These words, with one change, were penned by Robert Frost in 1922, the opening line of one of America’s most revered and recited poems, “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening.”

And on New Year’s Day, they entered the public domain, along with a huge cache of other long-copyrighted material. For the first time, we and anyone else can reproduce Frost’s iconic 1923 work without permission or restriction. And so we have:

Whose woods these are I think I know.

His house is in the village though;

He will not see me stopping here

To watch his woods fill up with snow.

-

My little horse must think it queer

To stop without a farmhouse near

Between the woods and frozen lake

The darkest evening of the year.

-

He gives his harness bells a shake

To ask if there is some mistake.

The only other sound’s the sweep

Of easy wind and downy flake.

-

The woods are lovely, dark and deep,

But I have promises to keep,

And miles to go before I sleep,

And miles to go before I sleep.

The work’s four stanzas—spare, musical and haunting—have been memorized by generations, dissected by scholars and beloved by presidents. And now that they are beyond the reach of copyright law, anyone can emblazon them anywhere, from inspirational posters to beach towels. Composers can lyricize them. Teachers can photocopy them. FedEx can paint “Miles to go” on its trucks. “Easy wind and downy flake” would make a good line of dryer sheets and laundry soap. Frost’s words belong to the ages and to everyone.

“I think it’s a wonderful thing,” said Jay Parini, a poet and Frost biographer who teaches at Middlebury College. “I hope it’s on mugs and T-shirts everywhere.”

The wide usage — even exploitation — of the very poem that Parini credits with inspiring his own career will only help extend Frost’s legacy, he said.

Not that a writer who won four Pulitzer Prizes and has a Vermont mountain named for him needs his poetry to be printed on dish towels to cement his reputation. But Frost himself said he hoped to create a few works that would be carved permanently in the public consciousness. One of his landmarks, 1916’s “The Road Not Taken,” is already in the public domain and reproduced widely in gift shops and anthologies alike. Now, “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” will get its own boost.

[Julia Grant couldn’t find a publisher for her memoir. Michelle Obama got paid millions for hers.]

“It will be out there forever now,” Parini said.

The poem, with its moody pondering of mortality, was born in a flash of inspiration midway through Frost’s life of professional acclaim and personal loss. In the summer of 1922, the poet was struggling with a long poem at his home in Shaftsbury, Vt. He had been working all night in the kitchen, Parini said, frustrated and thwarted. He crumpled up his efforts and went out onto the porch in time to see the first glow of dawn.

Poet Robert Frost in 1924. (AP)
Somehow, the sunrise of a dry summer morning evoked in his tired writer’s mind the evening of a snowy winter’s day. Almost a “hallucination,” he would say later. He turned back to his pen and one of the century’s great poems was born “without strain,” in Frost’s words.

“In 20 minutes, he had drafted the whole thing,” Parini said. “Extreme, shocking simplicity, that’s where Frost was at his greatest.”

The poem was published the following year in his fourth collection, “New Hampshire: A Poem With Notes and Grace Notes,” which won him his first Pulitzer. As Frost’s stature grew — he was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature a reported 31 times — “Stopping” appeared in more and more textbooks. For many English teachers, Frost’s craggy face was the Mount Rushmore of American letters, and “The woods are lovely, dark and deep” was taught to millions of young readers.

A presumptuous Dartmouth professor — and seeming Oxford comma zealot — named Edward Lathem added a misguided comma to that line in an authoritative Frost collection in 1969, a marring that would last 30 years.

[Washington and Lincoln were great presidents. But only one was a great poet.]

By the 1960s, Frost had reached the cool evening of his years but was a cultural hot commodity. The poet was a favorite of fellow New Englander John F. Kennedy, who invited Frost to begin the tradition of a poet reading verse at presidential inaugurations. But even before, Kennedy ended many of his campaign speeches with “And miles to go before I sleep/And miles to go before I sleep.”

The poem would have entered the public domain in the late 1990s if not for a push to extend copyright protections for many categories of intellectual property. At the time, most creative works were protected for 75 years. Congress responded to a major lobbying campaign — led largely by the Mickey Mouse-protecting Walt Disney Co. — with 1998’s Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, which retroactively extended copyright protection until Dec. 31, 2018.

Into that 20-year gap fell Superman, “Gone With the Wind” and Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue,” all of which will now begin stepping into free public use year by year. But first out of the box Tuesday are some long-cloistered jewels from 1923. According to Smithsonian magazine, they include works by Willa Cather, Arthur Conan Doyle and Zane Grey. And a certain 16-line vignette of a man pausing life and labor to consider the chill stillness yet to come.

Appearing soon on a coffee mug near you.

Friday, December 21, 2018

December 20, 2018

Poets’ Roundtable


Welcome


Richard will not be here. He hopes to bring his wife home on Sunday and to make our next meeting, January 3, 2018.


News and Jabber


This links to an article about plagiarism on Twitter. It serves as a reminder to us to attribute carefully and not to steal. Another "Vulture" article is here: https://www.vulture.com/2018/12/poetry-twitter-debates-whether-after-poems-are-plagiarism.html. It takes on another source of plagiarism or something close thereto.



Every year I urge you to go to youtube.com and listen to Dylan Thomas reading  "Child's Christmas in Wales." A great voice and a lovely reminisence. Here is he link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hv4-sgFw3Go. Worth twenty minutes at this time of year. A moment's peace. 

A poem called “Kindness” was the most popular work on top poetry website poets.org in 2018.

The poem, by 66-year-old Naomi Shihab Nye, was published in 1995. Nye was born in St. Louis to a Palestinian father and an American mother.

More than 250,000 people clicked on the poem this year, the Academy of American Poets announced Wednesday, according to The Associated Press.



Nye said in a statement that she wrote the poem after being robbed in Colombia, according to the AP.

“It is only kindness that makes sense anymore, only kindness that ties your shoes,” the poem reads.

The Current Assignment


I had a time with this. Wrote a lot. 

The Next Assignment

Suggestions?

The Next Meeting


The next meeting will be on January 3, 2018.

Other Jabber





Friday, December 7, 2018

Decemer 6, 2018

https://www.mcsweeneys.net/articles/the-beautiful-poetry-of-donald-trump

Also insert copy of the ars poetic from Baron Wormser "Anecdotes" from Subject Matter


Poets’ Roundtable


Welcome


News and Jabber


Regarding the prose poem, check  out this excellent artricle from The Guardian:

Ars Poetica certainly took me many ways. I brought two and don't know which to foist upon you.

The Current Assignment

The Next Assignment

The next assignment is to write a Christmas poem but it is to be a letter FROM Santa to anyone, anything, whate or whom ever. 

The Next Meeting


The next meeting is on December 20, 2018, 12:30 PM

Other Jabber

And now to the poetry of Donald Trump, which comes from https://www.mcsweeneys.net/articles/the-beautiful-poetry-of-donald-trump which features Rob Sears’ “strictly unauthorized” collection, The Beautiful Poetry of Donald Trump.

I am the least racist person there is1

I’ve always had a great relationship with the blacks2
I remained strong for Tiger Woods during his difficult period3
Oprah, I love Oprah. Oprah would always be my first choice4
Kanye West – I love him5
I think Eminem is fantastic, and most people think I wouldn’t like Eminem6
And did you know my name is in more black songs than any other name in hip-hop?7
You are the racist, not I8
- - -
1. Fox & Friends, Fox News, 9 May 2011
2. Interview on Talk1300 AM, 14 April 2011
3. Tweet referencing Tiger Woods’ marital infidelity and later victory at Trump National Doral, 20 March 2013
4. In answer to a question about possible VP picks in an interview with Larry King, 7 October 1999
5. Press conference, 3 September 2015
6. Playboy interview, 1 October 2004
7. Playboy interview, 1 October 2004
8. Annotation by Trump on article by Jonathan Capehart, which he sent to the journalist – tweeted by Capehart, July 8, 2015

Everybody loves me1

Tom Brady loves me2
The people of New York, they love me3
Upstate New York, I’m like the most popular person that’s ever lived4
The bikers love me5
You know who loves me? The Tea Party, the evangelicals6
My children could not love me more if I spent fifteen times more time with them7
The vets love me8
The African Americans love me9
The Asians love me10
Many Hispanics who love me11
Most conservatives love me12
Society loves me13
You are going to love me14
Or I will spill the beans on your wife!15
- - -
1. Interview with Anderson Cooper, CNN, 8 July 2015
2. Interview with Bob Woodward and Robert Costas, 8 April 2016
3. Address to supporters in Lawrenceville, New Jersey, CSPAN, 20 May 2016
4. Interview with CNN, 21 February 2016 
5. Washington This WeekCSPAN, 3 April 2016 
6. CNN Tonight with Don LemonCNN, 30 September 2015 
7. New York Magazine, 13 December 2004 
8. Morning JoeMSNBC, 24 July 2015 
9. Media Buzz, Fox News, 25 January 2016 
10. First LookMSNBC, 4 September 2015
11. America This MorningABC, 9 October 2015 
12. Meet the PressNBC, 24 January 2016
13. Anderson Cooper 360 GOP Town Hall, CNN, 19 February 2016
14. Remarks at Iowa State Fair on how he believed people would respond to his immigration policies, 15 August 2015
15. Tweet threatening Ted Cruz, 22 March 2016




Friday, November 16, 2018

November 15, 2018

https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poem/indications-excerpt

For item about ars poetica assignment

Poets’ Roundtable


Welcome

Great to be here.

News and Jabber



The above link will take you to an NPR interview with Robert Pinsky and Brian Turner, both poets, Turner a veteran. Robert Pinsky has been around a long time and is worth looking up. Check out the 22 minute segment.


This link will take you to the Wikipedia page of Ursula Le Guin. She worked in a lot of fantasy and fiction but at the end of her life turned out a book of poems titled So Far So Good. Here are three of her poems from that book. I especially like the opening lines of the second. 

Three New Poems by Ursula Le Guin
From her posthumous book, So Far So Good, the literary icon on time, aging, and memory
Welcome to Recommended Reading’s new Monday Commuter, our home for poetry, flash, graphic, and experimental narrative.


Flying Fox (Fruit Bat), James Reed
Issue №32
Bats
i
When I used to see bats flying
in the California twilight
their intricate zigzag voices
went flickering with them
but they fell silent with the years
and without that tiny sonar static
to see them flicker
in and out of being
is a kind of blindness

ii
In the twilight in my dream
a little bat was flying
and awakening I wondered
if the bat that I remembered
flying in the twilight
of the dream of California
was in California or the dream.

Ancestry
I am such a long way from my ancestors now
in my extreme old age that I feel more one of them
than their descendant. Time comes round
in a bodily way I do not understand. Age undoes itself
and plays the Ouroboros. I the only daughter
have always been one of the tiny grandmothers,
laughing at everything, uncomprehending,
incomprehensible.

Looking Back
Remember me before I was a heap of salt,
the laughing child who seldom did
as she was told or came when she was called,
the merry girl who became Lot’s bride,
the happy woman who loved her wicked city.
Do not remember me with pity.
I saw you plodding on ahead
into the desert of your pitiless faith.
Those springs are dry, that earth is dead.
I looked back, not forward, into death.
Forgiving rains dissolve me, and I come
still disobedient, still happy, home.


About the Author
Ursula Kroeber Le Guin (1929–2018) was a celebrated and beloved author of 21 novels, 11 volumes of short stories, four collections of essays, 12 children’s books, six volumes of poetry and four of translation. The breadth and imagination of her work earned her six Nebulas, seven Hugos, and SFWA’s Grand Master, along with the PEN/Malamud and many other awards. In 2014 she was awarded the National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, and in 2016 joined the short list of authors to be published in their lifetimes by the Library of America.

The Current Assignment

Wh did it? Any comments regarding the process?

The Next Assignment


The above link will take you to a list of  poems reagarding ars poetica, which means "the art of poetry." The poems vary in title and style. Here is a segment from Walt Whitman:

The Indications [excerpt]
Walt Whitman, 1819 - 1892
 The words of the true poems give you more than poems,   
They give you to form for yourself, poems, religions, politics, war, peace, behavior, histories, essays, romances, and everything else,   
They balance ranks, colors, races, creeds, and the sexes,
They do not seek beauty—they are sought,   
Forever touching them, or close upon them, follows beauty, longing, fain, love-sick.   
   
They prepare for death—yet are they not the finish, but rather the outset,   
They bring none to his or her terminus, or to be content and full;   
Whom they take, they take into space, to behold the birth of stars, to learn one of the meanings,
To launch off with absolute faith—to sweep through the ceaseless rings, and never be quiet again.

So the assignment is to write your own ars poetica.


The Next Meeting

The next meeting will be on Thursday, December 6, 2018.

Other Jabber





Thursday, November 1, 2018

November 1, 2018

Poets’ Roundtable


Welcome

As we read and speak today, let us remember to listen attentively. We, in our enthusiasm, at times talk over one another and this causes us to lose time and insight. It also does violence to the poem which is meant to be the center of our focus.  



News and Jabber

This link will take you to a New Yorker article about Donald Hall's writing life after age 80. The many links will take you to further samples, info, etc. about that remarkable period in Hall's life.

One of his later poems, linked to in the article is nine stanzas of nine lines of nine syllables.  Rather than that, let's just write poems of any length with nine-syllapble lines and nine-line stanzas of any number. Please make it more than one stanza long.

Additionally, here is a link to another New Yorker article, this one about Tony Hoagland, whose death I noted recently noted in an email. https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/11/05/peaceful-transition

The Current Assignment

I found it manifesting itself in various ways and wrote three contenders for the assignment. I'll present the one I think best exemplifies transfiguring language.

The Next Assignment


Write a  poem of at least two nine-line, nine-syllable stanzas.

The Next Meeting


The next meeting will be on Thursday, November 15, 2018.

Other Jabber

I am re-reading The Bow and the Lyre by Octavio Paz. It is one of my bibles. When we looked at prose poems a couple of months ago I spoke about poetic language as an outstanding feature of the prose poems. Poetic language has more to do with the making of the poem than almost any other feature. Paz, in this book, spends a lot of time speaking of the language poets use. I like his assertion that poetic language that is transfigured. If the language is transfigured, then we find that ideas rhyme. It is not unlike magic. So, look into your own poems to find where language is transfigured. If it is not something more than ordinary language, try to make it so. Language moves from representing something to phrasing that declares something unnameable. Read from pages 28 and 29.

If time permits, discuss the encounter with Elizabeth Bishop.


Between Going And Coming - Poem by Octavio Paz

Between going and staying
the day wavers,
in love with its own transparency.
The circular afternoon is now a bay
where the world in stillness rocks.

All is visible and all elusive,
all is near and can’t be touched.

Paper, book, pencil, glass,
rest in the shade of their names.

Time throbbing in my temples repeats
the same unchanging syllable of blood.

The light turns the indifferent wall
into a ghostly theater of reflections.

I find myself in the middle of an eye,
watching myself in its blank stare.

The moment scatters. Motionless,
I stay and go: I am a pause.