3.18.2012
3.15.2012
3.14.2012
haunted importantly
I suppose there is something in my Scottish blood which distrusts the Baroque, feeling there is something vaguely dishonest in using structural devices for decorative purposes. But it is more importantly true that my reservations are because it is an approach that dotes on the surface—whereas my chief interest is focused on the interior of things. I enjoy surfaces, I delight in Italy, I find great pleasure in Veronese, but the Rembrandt self-portraits are far, far more important to me. As the Giotto Madonnas are more valuable than those of Raphael. I relish the physical surface of a woman, but I am importantly haunted by the ghost inside.
Jack Gilbert, “Real Nouns,” 19 American Poets of the Golden Gate (Harcourt Brace, 1984)
[Collected Poems of Jack Gilbert released this week.]
Jack Gilbert, “Real Nouns,” 19 American Poets of the Golden Gate (Harcourt Brace, 1984)
[Collected Poems of Jack Gilbert released this week.]
3.13.2012
voice carries
Voice, as an attribute, cannot be achieved by writing one or two poems. Voice pervades the body of work. Voice is style laced with recurring content and theme.
3.12.2012
inexhaustible resource
Before the poem was in any way fixed in its original language, the translations of it began to multiply.
3.11.2012
simply symbolic
I’m not saying your work is “Hallmarky” exactly, but I was able to do an adequate translation of your poem using only emoticons.
3.10.2012
3.09.2012
3.08.2012
masked man
Frost uses masks not to deflect the personal voice but to find one, or several. He speaks truthfully when speaking as someone else, when he can assume the otherness of a mask, looking through those eyeholes at the world. Tone, he notes, is how you take yourself, your stance toward the world; literally, it is your attitude. Paradoxically, it seems harder to speak as one’s self without the sustained practice of speaking as somebody else.
—Jay Parini, “The Personal Voice,” Why Poetry Matters (Yale Univ. Press, 2008)
—Jay Parini, “The Personal Voice,” Why Poetry Matters (Yale Univ. Press, 2008)
3.07.2012
3.06.2012
books and such
I went into a bookstore but couldn’t recognize any of the merchandise for sale therein.
2.29.2012
gulf and gift
Art should begin with aspiration for perfect execution, but end with acceptance of the gift of what is given.
2.27.2012
application checklist
I see you have three blurbs on the back of your book, just like the three letters of recommendation you needed to get into graduate school.
2.26.2012
exploded limits
Poetry is the dance of truth among limits which are its occasion and which it explodes.
—Lewis Thompson, Fathomless Heart: The Spiritual and Philosophical Reflections of an English Poet-Sage (DharmaCafe Books/North Atlantic Books, 2011), edited with an introduction by Richard Lannoy
—Lewis Thompson, Fathomless Heart: The Spiritual and Philosophical Reflections of an English Poet-Sage (DharmaCafe Books/North Atlantic Books, 2011), edited with an introduction by Richard Lannoy
2.25.2012
ever undefined
It is often cited that the root of the word poetry comes from the Greek term poïesis meaning “to make.” But make how? And make what? So much lies undisclosed in the concept of mere ‘making’.
2.23.2012
testament not commentary
Only those who believe in poetry write the significant poems; the rest are writing a kind of poetic criticism/commentary in the form of a poem.
2.22.2012
2.21.2012
2.20.2012
inconspicuous and overlooked
Originally, the Japanese words “wabi” and “sabi” had quite different meanings. “Sabi” originally meant “chill,” “lean,” or “withered.” “Wabi” originally meant the misery of living alone in nature, away from society, and suggested a discouraged, dispirited, cheerless emotional state. Around the 14th century, the meanings of both words began to evolve in the direction of more positive aesthetic values. The self-imposed isolation and voluntary poverty of the hermit and ascetic came to be considered opportunities for spiritual richness. For the poetically inclined, this kind of life fostered an appreciation of the minor details of everyday life and insights into the beauty of the inconspicuous and overlooked aspects of nature. In turn, unprepossessing simplicity took on new meaning as the basis for a new, pure beauty.
—Leonard Koren, Wabi-Sabi for Artists, Designers, Poets & Philosophers (Impermanence Publishing, 2008)
—Leonard Koren, Wabi-Sabi for Artists, Designers, Poets & Philosophers (Impermanence Publishing, 2008)
2.19.2012
2.16.2012
2.15.2012
instructions
Be patient and observe. Wait and listen. Hold it and be
still. Place it on your tongue. Then breathe in.
2.13.2012
anachronistic turn
The kind of line break so fashionable back in the day, you
thought you could hear the faint echo of a carriage return bell at the turn.
2.12.2012
responding with poetry
Within the diaries…there will be occasional moments when one senses a contrast in moving from poem to prose to poem, but the contrast is surely no greater than that from aria to recitative to aria, and it is usually less. One reason for such smoothness of movement between different literary modes is that the Japanese are so given, or were so given, to responding with poetry that there is a naturalness and integrity in combining the modes. Another reason is that the diary prose itself, through art, shades off from fact at one side of the narrow margin to fiction on the other side. When art is made to seem natural, or when the actual is rendered into full art, the margin becomes less important than the achievement.
—Earl Miner, Japanese Poetic Diaries (U. of California Press, 1969)
—Earl Miner, Japanese Poetic Diaries (U. of California Press, 1969)
2.11.2012
2.09.2012
2.08.2012
2.07.2012
and then came this
For any valid definition of poetry, wait awhile, and another poem will come along to disprove the case.
2.06.2012
2.04.2012
complex but easy to carry
The proof of poetry was, in [James Russell] Lowell's mind, that it reduced to the essence of a single line the vague philosophy that floated in all men's minds, so as to render it portable and useful, ready to the hand.
—Matthew Pearl, The Dante Club (Random House. 2003, p.34)
—Matthew Pearl, The Dante Club (Random House. 2003, p.34)
2.03.2012
out there, up there
I knew his work was kind of dreamy but then he told me all his poems were in the cloud.
2.02.2012
sound the leaves make
At times meaning is no more than a wind moving through the forest of the alphabet.
2.01.2012
1.31.2012
1.28.2012
given to song
The poetry of Japan takes the human heart as seed and flourishes in the countless leaves of words. Because human beings possess interests of so many kinds, it is in poetry that they give expression to the meditations of their hearts in terms of the sights appearing before their eyes and the sounds coming to their ears. Hearing the warbler sing among the blossoms and the frog that lives in the waters—is there any living thing not given to song? It is poetry which, without exertion, moves heaven and earth, stirs the feelings of gods and spirits invisible to the eye, softens the relations between men and women, calms the hearts of fierce warriors.
—Ki no Tsurayuki (868-945), the preface to Kokinshū
(quoted in The Princeton Companion to Classical Japanese Literature, Princeton Univ. Press, 1985)
—Ki no Tsurayuki (868-945), the preface to Kokinshū
(quoted in The Princeton Companion to Classical Japanese Literature, Princeton Univ. Press, 1985)
1.26.2012
1.25.2012
1.23.2012
1.22.2012
language engineers
Structural, mechanical, chemical, electrical,…poets are the engineers of the language.
1.21.2012
complete equipment
The poet is a rebuilder of the imagination…And he is not a complete poet if his whole imagination is not attuned and his whole experience composed into a single symphony.
For his complete equipment, then, it is necessary, in the first place, that he sing; that his voice be pure and well pitched, and that his numbers flow; then, at a higher stage, his images must fit with one another; he must be euphuistic, coloring his thoughts with many reflected lights of memory and suggestion, so that their harmony may be rich and profound; again, at a higher stage, he must be sensuous and free, that is, he must build up his world with the primary elements of experience, not with conventions of common sense or intelligence; he must draw the whole soul into his harmonies, even if in doing so he disintegrates the partial systemizations of experience made by abstract science in the categories of prose.
—George Santayana, “The Elements and Functions of Poetry,” Aesthetics and the Arts (McGraw-Hill, 1968), edited by Lee A Jacobus
For his complete equipment, then, it is necessary, in the first place, that he sing; that his voice be pure and well pitched, and that his numbers flow; then, at a higher stage, his images must fit with one another; he must be euphuistic, coloring his thoughts with many reflected lights of memory and suggestion, so that their harmony may be rich and profound; again, at a higher stage, he must be sensuous and free, that is, he must build up his world with the primary elements of experience, not with conventions of common sense or intelligence; he must draw the whole soul into his harmonies, even if in doing so he disintegrates the partial systemizations of experience made by abstract science in the categories of prose.
—George Santayana, “The Elements and Functions of Poetry,” Aesthetics and the Arts (McGraw-Hill, 1968), edited by Lee A Jacobus
Labels:
charge,
equipment,
experience,
george santayana,
imagination,
memory,
numbers,
quote,
sing
1.18.2012
1.17.2012
down to words
Because it’s made of such common material (our words), poetry survives (and even thrives) in the most dire and desperate of circumstances.
1.16.2012
1.15.2012
1.14.2012
1.12.2012
global airspace of poetry
Today I believe that with these eight indigent lines I had gained access to a hoary secret society. Without seeking official permission and empty-handed, I had entered an invisible institution, the global airspace of poetry—it was that simple. Besides, who could those permission-granting officials possibly have been? There was no more Parnassus, nor, far and wide, a brotherhood or bohème. I heard of a poetry scene for the first time when I enrolled at Humboldt University in Berlin. That Prenzlauer Berg with its run-down buildings would later become my very own Montparnasse, my drab Salon des Indépendants, populated by similarly idealistic stragglers as I, was unplanned. The muses, I soon realized, while taking course at the local adult education center, were nothing but a worn-out Greek allegory. The line had long been disconnected; you might as well try reading your poems to the ladies at the municipal registry, or the tellers at the post office. No, no, there was no formal accreditation process. You had to begin from scratch, cut off from both the classical and the modern traditions, in the vacuum of a society that tolerated literature only as mouthpiece for ideology. Even if you couldn’t see yourself that way: You were the young barbarian who undertook to carry the burden of a discarded culture on his frail shoulders in defiance of all evolutionary logic.
—Durs Grünbein, The Vocation of Poetry (Upper West Side Philosophers, Inc., 2010)
—Durs Grünbein, The Vocation of Poetry (Upper West Side Philosophers, Inc., 2010)
Labels:
barbarian,
credentials,
durs grünbein,
first poem,
ideology,
initiation,
permission,
quote,
young poet
1.11.2012
1.10.2012
1.08.2012
1.06.2012
1.05.2012
ways and means
Though in conversation or a drinking bout, Edmund Smith was always jotting thoughts and images. But he completed little.
[…]
[Christopher] Smart, being in a madhouse and denied writing materials, wrote much of his verse, probably including the Song of David, with a key on the walls of his cell.
[…]
[William] Mickle, being a printer, often composed his verses directly into type without taking the trouble previously to put them into writing.
—Chard Powers Smith, Annals of the Poets (Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1935)
[…]
[Christopher] Smart, being in a madhouse and denied writing materials, wrote much of his verse, probably including the Song of David, with a key on the walls of his cell.
[…]
[William] Mickle, being a printer, often composed his verses directly into type without taking the trouble previously to put them into writing.
—Chard Powers Smith, Annals of the Poets (Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1935)
1.04.2012
1.03.2012
1.02.2012
12.31.2011
wherever the end
The last lines of almost any poem, because they are the ending, will by default seem a grand summing up or a reaching for epiphany. Had the last few lines been anywhere else in the poem they’d be seen as much less portentous.
12.30.2011
12.28.2011
12.27.2011
not a hill or a tree
Objective painting is not good painting unless it is good in the abstract sense. A hill or a tree cannot make a good painting just because it is a hill or a tree. It is lines and colors put together so that they say something. For me that is the very basis of painting. The abstraction is the most the definite form for the intangible thing in myself that I can only clarify in paint.
—Georgia O’Keeffe, 1977
[Quote encountered today at the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, NM.]
—Georgia O’Keeffe, 1977
[Quote encountered today at the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, NM.]
12.26.2011
12.24.2011
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