ursprache
sometimes the words escape me
9.11.2024
not me
If a poem writes itself, do I have a plausible alibi?
Labels:
alibi,
inside joke,
plausible,
writes itself
9.10.2024
9.08.2024
demotic speech
If poetry had not turned to demotic speech after Modernism, after Beat, after New American Poetry, etc., it would have become like a collection of antique music boxes that are only wound from time to time to keep the springs in good working order.
Labels:
beat,
change,
demotic speech,
modernism,
music boxes,
springs,
times
9.07.2024
talk it up
Blurbs and other forms of rodomontade...
"No industry [film industry] did more to destroy the meaning of words. The follies are too familiar to need laboring here—how the story of a couple of cowboys quarreling over a girl became an epic, the tale of a small-time 'hoofer' a deathless saga. Colossal, terrific, stupendous—these words became the small change of film advertising. A reservation was put on a whole series of other adjectives like throbbing, rending, tingling, pulsating, pounding, sizzling, scorching, stark, elemental, volcanic, and searing. No story was ever taken from life—it was ripped or torn from the mighty canvas of humanity."
—E.S. Turner, The Shocking History of Advertising! (New York: E.P. Dutton, 1953)
"No industry [film industry] did more to destroy the meaning of words. The follies are too familiar to need laboring here—how the story of a couple of cowboys quarreling over a girl became an epic, the tale of a small-time 'hoofer' a deathless saga. Colossal, terrific, stupendous—these words became the small change of film advertising. A reservation was put on a whole series of other adjectives like throbbing, rending, tingling, pulsating, pounding, sizzling, scorching, stark, elemental, volcanic, and searing. No story was ever taken from life—it was ripped or torn from the mighty canvas of humanity."
—E.S. Turner, The Shocking History of Advertising! (New York: E.P. Dutton, 1953)
Labels:
adjectives,
advertising,
blurbs,
book marketing,
hyperbole,
small change
9.06.2024
bad poet good person
When you are the organizer of a reading series, inevitably someone who is a terrible poet but a very nice person will ask to be a featured reader (often touting a self-published book)—and there is no good way of saying no.
Labels:
bad poet,
no,
organizer,
poetry reading,
saying no
9.04.2024
runover words
He had a funny habit of placing a line break so that the words starting the next line would be shown to be superfluous.
Labels:
cut,
extra words,
line break,
poetic line,
superfluous
9.03.2024
loose thread
Like a loose thread in a beautiful garment, an odd unwound line can alter and awaken one’s reading of the poem.
Labels:
awaken,
fabric,
garment,
line,
loose thread,
poetic line,
reading poetry
9.02.2024
repeated beat-down
Any poem that uses the same repeated word or phrase past a page’s length is trying to shut down the reader’s mind.
8.30.2024
fierce company
Poetry decides power, not politics
or wealth, not torment. Fierce company,
those ragged lines, spells of a magician
that become; over time, more curse than elixir.
—Dennis Barone, "Side-Straddle Hop," After Math (Cyber Wit, 2023)
or wealth, not torment. Fierce company,
those ragged lines, spells of a magician
that become; over time, more curse than elixir.
—Dennis Barone, "Side-Straddle Hop," After Math (Cyber Wit, 2023)
8.28.2024
radio left on
Most poems will be like a radio left on in a vacant room, a device talking into space.
Labels:
poem is,
publishing poetry,
radio,
room
8.27.2024
consumerist cantos
It was a dollar-store Cantos, its references and allusions coming cheap and easy.
Labels:
allusions,
cantos,
cheap,
dollar-store,
easy,
references
8.26.2024
word bather
A poet who bathed in words, and words were nothing to him and everything all at once.
[Thinking of poet Peter Ganick.]
[Thinking of poet Peter Ganick.]
Labels:
bath,
everything,
language poetry,
memorial,
nothing,
peter ganick,
words
8.25.2024
8.23.2024
not words alone
Poetry
Forgive me for helping you understand
that you're not made of words alone.
—Rogue Dalton, "Poetic Art" (1974)
Forgive me for helping you understand
that you're not made of words alone.
—Rogue Dalton, "Poetic Art" (1974)
Labels:
alone,
made,
political poetry,
rogue dalton,
words
8.22.2024
no ball of light
A poet who wrote attractive lines and phrases that never would cohere into the force of a poem.
Labels:
attractive,
cohere,
force,
lines,
phrases
8.20.2024
says too much
Writing that suffers from the utter inability to understate.
Labels:
understate,
verbose
8.19.2024
missing person
There was plenty of personality in the poems, but little that was truly personal.
Labels:
biography,
personal,
personality
8.17.2024
8.16.2024
human politics
He didn’t write political poems, rather he wrote human poems, and thereby their concerns were political.
Labels:
concern,
human,
political poems
8.14.2024
inventing a new language
In a letter to Frank O’Hara (August 18, 1965), Robert Motherwell wrote a series of aphoristic statements regarding art, artists and art-making. The intent of these statements was to spur O’Hara to get started on the catalog essay for a Motherwell retrospective at MOMA which O’Hara was curating:
“…when the deadline for his catalog essay arrived, O’Hara developed writer’s block. Motherwell, who had experienced many such an impasse in his painting and writing, sent O’Hara a battery of his random thoughts, written in a single morning, hoping that one of them might ignite a spark. Against the objection of the artist, who felt his thoughts had been written for private purposes, O’Hara published Motherwell’s letter in the exhibition catalog.” From The Collected Writings of Robert Motherwell (Oxford U. Press, 1992), edited by Stephanie Terenzio, and here is a selection of Robert Motherwell’s remarks from the letter:
Only painters and sculptors, among artists, can be exposed in toto in a few minutes—or seem to be.
The content has always to be expressed in modern terms: that is the basic premise. Joyce understood that perfectly.
The greater the precision of feeling, the more personal the work will be.
The problems of inventing a new language are staggering. But what else can one do if one needs to express one’s feeling precisely.
What paintings can stand up against the physical presence of nature? Few, and often least of all those who have nature as the principal subject.
Every picture one paints involves not painting others! What a choice?
The drama of creativity is that one’s resources, no matter how unusual, are inadequate.
Irony, the greatest necessity of everyday life, does not work in pictures. (Neither does pathos.)
There is something princely about even the most democratic artists.
One does not have to “understand” wholly to feel pleasure.
If life was longer one could express more. Since it isn’t, stick to the essentials.
The beauty of another being’s presence.
Some children quit painting if they haven’t the proper color. Picasso says, you just use another color. Who’s right?
The supreme gift, after light, is scale.
What better way to spend one’s life than to have, as one’s primary task, the insistence on integrity of feeling? No wonder others are fascinated by artists.
Moments of joy make existence bearable: who ignores joy is immoral.
The material things of life are mere decorations. Enough space, light, and white walls make any environment workable.
The world cannot endure that artists’ money comes from so much pleasure.
The surrealist group used to demand a picture each year from its painters: the proceeds were used to support their poets. They recognized the social injustice in the fact that a great painting has more commodity value than a great poem and equalized the situation. No one objected.
To modify one’s art is to modify one’s character. An artist whose work develops represents character growth, either slow and steady, like a garden, or in leaps…
The problem is to seize the glimpse.
The ethic lies in not making the glimpse presentable.
If one paints on an enormous scale, one gets involved in all the problems of running a lumberyard.
The beauty of Europe is that sculpture is everywhere. The sculpture doesn’t have to be great to function perfectly in the landscape, humanizing it.
America is what the poor people of Europe invented, given means enough and time. Europeans therefore shouldn’t snub it.
The only thing that I bought in Greece (1965) was a scale-model of a Homeric ship.
From my writings, it would seem that I am more interested in poetry than painting, which of course is not at all true. It is that the poets have speculated much more in words about what “the modern” is.
The interest in language so dominant in modern art is not an interest in semantics per se: it is a continual interest in making language (whatever the medium) to fit our real feelings better, and even to be able to express true feelings that had never been capable of expression before.
I love Hopkins’s insistence on particularization.
Barnett Newman for years has said that when he reads my writings he learns what I have been reading, but when he wants to know what I am really concerned with at a given moment, he looks at my pictures. He’s right.
To have the discipline to shut up, and just paint the pictures!
Only painters and sculptors, among artists, can be exposed in toto in a few minutes—or seem to be.
The content has always to be expressed in modern terms: that is the basic premise. Joyce understood that perfectly.
The greater the precision of feeling, the more personal the work will be.
The problems of inventing a new language are staggering. But what else can one do if one needs to express one’s feeling precisely.
What paintings can stand up against the physical presence of nature? Few, and often least of all those who have nature as the principal subject.
Every picture one paints involves not painting others! What a choice?
The drama of creativity is that one’s resources, no matter how unusual, are inadequate.
Irony, the greatest necessity of everyday life, does not work in pictures. (Neither does pathos.)
There is something princely about even the most democratic artists.
One does not have to “understand” wholly to feel pleasure.
If life was longer one could express more. Since it isn’t, stick to the essentials.
The beauty of another being’s presence.
Some children quit painting if they haven’t the proper color. Picasso says, you just use another color. Who’s right?
The supreme gift, after light, is scale.
What better way to spend one’s life than to have, as one’s primary task, the insistence on integrity of feeling? No wonder others are fascinated by artists.
Moments of joy make existence bearable: who ignores joy is immoral.
The material things of life are mere decorations. Enough space, light, and white walls make any environment workable.
The world cannot endure that artists’ money comes from so much pleasure.
The surrealist group used to demand a picture each year from its painters: the proceeds were used to support their poets. They recognized the social injustice in the fact that a great painting has more commodity value than a great poem and equalized the situation. No one objected.
To modify one’s art is to modify one’s character. An artist whose work develops represents character growth, either slow and steady, like a garden, or in leaps…
The problem is to seize the glimpse.
The ethic lies in not making the glimpse presentable.
If one paints on an enormous scale, one gets involved in all the problems of running a lumberyard.
The beauty of Europe is that sculpture is everywhere. The sculpture doesn’t have to be great to function perfectly in the landscape, humanizing it.
America is what the poor people of Europe invented, given means enough and time. Europeans therefore shouldn’t snub it.
The only thing that I bought in Greece (1965) was a scale-model of a Homeric ship.
From my writings, it would seem that I am more interested in poetry than painting, which of course is not at all true. It is that the poets have speculated much more in words about what “the modern” is.
The interest in language so dominant in modern art is not an interest in semantics per se: it is a continual interest in making language (whatever the medium) to fit our real feelings better, and even to be able to express true feelings that had never been capable of expression before.
I love Hopkins’s insistence on particularization.
Barnett Newman for years has said that when he reads my writings he learns what I have been reading, but when he wants to know what I am really concerned with at a given moment, he looks at my pictures. He’s right.
To have the discipline to shut up, and just paint the pictures!
8.12.2024
subject matter self
One of those poets who wouldn’t have a subject if she couldn’t write about herself.
Labels:
range,
scope,
self,
subject matter
8.10.2024
stanza thus
A good stanza from almost any poem could stand alone as a poem.
Labels:
poem is,
stand alone,
stanza
8.08.2024
cow of the world
There are lines for which a poet will not be forgotten, nor forgiven.
[Thinking of Richard Wilbur's "We milk the cow of the world...", from "Epistemology"]
[Thinking of Richard Wilbur's "We milk the cow of the world...", from "Epistemology"]
Labels:
bad poetry,
cow,
forgiven,
forgotten,
lines,
poetic line,
richard wilbur
8.07.2024
language resources
Considering whether there is a hierarchy of language resources one can deploy in writing poetry: I think there are greater and lesser resources and then there are ones that rise and fall by the fashion of the times, and some that better serve the subjective predilections of this or that poet.
8.05.2024
depleted lines
Long poems that aren’t narratives deplete themselves line by line.
Labels:
deplete,
long poems,
narrative
8.04.2024
make it better
If poets were allowed to publish only 100 pages of poetry every ten years, one wonders if the overall art might be lifted by such a constraint.
8.02.2024
formatting f/x
The formatting looked advanced though the text was rather conventional.
Labels:
conventional,
format,
text
8.01.2024
resist the lapse
The best older poets resist the lapse into writing mainly about mortality and death.
7.29.2024
energy to inertia
The energy of the poem came from line to line being non sequitur. After about a dozen such lines the effect became inertial.
Labels:
energy,
inertia,
non sequitur,
poetic line
7.27.2024
terrible cumulative force
The well-known critic, poet, and impresario Lincoln Kirstein, in an essay included as part of [Walker] Evans’s American Photographs, the catalogue for the artist’s landmark show at the Museum of Modern Art in 1938, indicated how his friend’s gift as a photographer was that he could single out the specific, the particular, so as to suggest a shared, but often otherwise unrecognized commonality. “The power of Evans’s work,” Kirstein wrote, “lies in the fact that he so details the effect of circumstances on familiar specimens that the single face, the single house, the single street strikes with the strength of overwhelming numbers, the terrible cumulative force of thousands of faces, houses and streets.” If Evans could lay bare the truth in one person, he could point it out in, and consequently for, everyone.
—Richard Deming, This Exquisite Loneliness: What Loners, Outcasts, and the Misunderstood Can Teach Us About Creativity (Viking – Penguin Random House, 2023)
—Richard Deming, This Exquisite Loneliness: What Loners, Outcasts, and the Misunderstood Can Teach Us About Creativity (Viking – Penguin Random House, 2023)
Labels:
art is,
faces,
lincoln kirstein,
photography,
richard deming,
streets,
walker evans
7.25.2024
one or many
Many series poems are little more than extended writing exercises. One or two poems could count for the many.
Labels:
one,
serial,
series,
writing exercise
7.24.2024
many lives
Poet, your personal history is just an iteration of millions of others.
Labels:
admonition,
autobiographical,
life,
personal,
personal history
7.23.2024
read local hear local
Read poetry locally. Hear poetry locally.
Labels:
audience,
charge,
local,
reading poety
7.22.2024
do one thing well
Writers and artists who get stuck in a signature style.
Labels:
audience,
signature style,
stuck
7.21.2024
poetry wants you
Poetry opens its arms to people society has trouble accepting.
Labels:
acceptance,
arms,
poetry,
society,
welcome
7.19.2024
extrusion publishing
No respect for a press that doesn’t protect its list.
Labels:
discernment,
list,
literary publishing,
press
7.18.2024
world falls silent
No one really likes starlings.
For that reason alone, I continue
to savor them as they dip and dim
and vanish, taking with them
stemma, chrysalis, reticulate, telluric,
umbra, redolence, circumjacence,
and the verb perpend—each one
endangered, nearly extinct, desperate
for a mouth to roost in, for a tongue
that will relish the taste of its consonants
and vowels. What else might a word want?
A mind that respects what words mean.
Enough heart to know that within each
word left unsaid, a lost autochthonous
world falls silent. No assonance,
not even an echo. Each unused word an urn.
—Margaret Gibson, closing of the poem “Elegy, with Murmuration of Starlings,” Connecticut River Review, 2024
For that reason alone, I continue
to savor them as they dip and dim
and vanish, taking with them
stemma, chrysalis, reticulate, telluric,
umbra, redolence, circumjacence,
and the verb perpend—each one
endangered, nearly extinct, desperate
for a mouth to roost in, for a tongue
that will relish the taste of its consonants
and vowels. What else might a word want?
A mind that respects what words mean.
Enough heart to know that within each
word left unsaid, a lost autochthonous
world falls silent. No assonance,
not even an echo. Each unused word an urn.
—Margaret Gibson, closing of the poem “Elegy, with Murmuration of Starlings,” Connecticut River Review, 2024
Labels:
margaret gibson,
starlings,
urn,
vocabulary,
words
7.17.2024
7.16.2024
7.15.2024
i think therefore iamb
He was beginning to think in iambs or else he was starting to hear his pulse inside his head.
makes itself new
Unless the world stands still, poetry will change.
Labels:
change,
make it new,
new,
still,
world
7.13.2024
weak critic
A critic who only took on books by no-accounts so as not to offend any of the gatekeepers.
Labels:
book reviewing,
critic,
gatekeeper
7.11.2024
composition or content
There are people who keep commonplace books for their compositional and calligraphic beauty. Other people will scrawl over the pages or paste in clippings askew, concerned only with the quality of the content they’ve captured.
Labels:
askew,
calligraphic,
commonplace book,
composition,
content
7.10.2024
7.09.2024
no tail no donkey
…one finds it unbearable that poetry should be so hard to write—a game of Pin the Tail on the Donkey in which there is for most of the players no tail, no donkey, not even a booby prize. If there were only some mechanism (like Seurat's proposed system of painting, or the projected Universal Algebra that Gödel believes Leibnitz to have perfected and mislaid) for reasonably and systematically converting into poetry what we see and feel and are! When one reads the verse of people who cannot write poems—people who sometimes have more intelligence, sensibility, and moral discrimination than most of the poets—it is hard not to regard the Muse as a sort of fairy godmother who says to the poet, after her colleagues have showered on him the most disconcerting and ambiguous gifts, "Well, never mind. You're still the only one that can write poetry."
—Randall Jarrell, from the brief essay “Bad Poets” (1953)
—Randall Jarrell, from the brief essay “Bad Poets” (1953)
7.08.2024
faux poems
Poet, if you don’t have anything to say—that’s okay. Just wait. Don’t fall for the faux poems that come from prompts.
7.07.2024
bigger than us
Poetry is bigger than you or me and any of our predilections.
Labels:
bigger,
poetry is,
predilections,
taste
7.05.2024
bad day for poets
It has been estimated that if Brooklyn suddenly slid into the Atlantic, the U.S. would lose 50% of its poets in a single catastrophic event.
Labels:
atlantic,
brooklyn,
catastrophe,
lives of the poets
7.04.2024
young and beautiful
All the poets are getting younger and more beautiful.
Labels:
age,
beautiful,
lives of the poets,
times,
youth
7.02.2024
mere description
I have always thought it was worth paying attention to actions or qualities routinely dismissed as mere when they appear in writing about art, literature, the world. Mere description, for instance, is in reality the most vexing thing to attempt when faced with any form of art, let alone aspect of reality.
—Brian Dillon, “Essay on Affinity II,” Affinities: On Art and Fascination (New York Review of Books, 2023)
—Brian Dillon, “Essay on Affinity II,” Affinities: On Art and Fascination (New York Review of Books, 2023)
Labels:
art,
description,
difficult,
literature,
mere,
reality
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