12.04.2023

closed nets

Poets are ignored or neglected for various reasons, and seldom is any kind active antipathy involved, rather, it’s just laziness on the part of critics and of readers unwilling to open wide their nets beyond what they already know.

12.03.2023

winking at you

One of those linebreaks that’s winking at you…knows it’s oh so clever.

12.02.2023

image of note: crows

Crows pass above like arguments with wings.

—David Pontrelli, from “Outpost,” Poems for Streets and People: 1991-2001 (Cold Mountain Press, 2023)

[Images/similes/metaphors that fuse the concrete and the abstract.]

12.01.2023

oed till the end

I happen to own a full-sized set of the Oxford English Dictionary. It was given to me by my wife as a wedding present. Just wow. I don’t go to them as often in this digital age, but I will keep them to the end of my life. If I open my arms I could try to lift them, but the volumes end to end are near a yard wide, and each volume is a foot high, each volume a tome. Word tomb now? It would be like trying to lift sacred stone tablets. I’d be afraid they’d slip from my grip, break apart on the ground, words, words, words, spilling out.

11.30.2023

trainwreck artist

Did the poet really think that making his life a disaster would make him a great artist, or knowing that he was making a disaster of his life, did he justify his actions as being for the sake of his art?

[Thinking of John Berryman]

11.29.2023

messed up lives

Investigating the lives of our literary gods we find they were as messed up as the Greek gods.

11.27.2023

say when

Excess even in a short poem.

11.26.2023

form finds a function

Free verse is individualistic: the entire poem is entirely up to you. Every aspect of it is your choice, your decision. You make it all. In a sense, every free verse poem reinvents the poem.
[…]
When you’re working in a strict form sometimes a certain magic takes place. You realize that the content is finding itself through the form. The form gives you your poem.

“Form follows function,” engineers say. Evidently it can go the other way round. Following form, you find function.

—Ursula Le Guin, “Form, Free Verse, Free Form: Some Thoughts,” afterword to Late in the Day: Poems 2010-2014 (PM Pres, 2015)

11.25.2023

true surreal

The true surreal that is not meant to shock but to astonish.

11.24.2023

articulate learning

In close reading or critical analysis of the poem what is learned comes from the articulation of one’s response to the piece.

11.22.2023

generative entity

Ashbery as both Proteus and Proust.

11.20.2023

reading is the event

Young poet, reading poetry is more important than poetry readings.

11.18.2023

suspect speaker

Resist the default notion that the speaker of the poem is the self-same person as the name in the byline.

11.16.2023

charge to poets

It’s the poet’s responsibility to learn the truth from the powerless.

—Grace Paley, “Of Poetry and Women and the World,” Just a Thought (FSG, 1998)

11.15.2023

first or last

The first line of the poem should have been the last.

11.14.2023

heretofore unseen

Whether by wonder or dismay, in that moment of first experiencing the art, no one would be able to recognize the artist’s accomplishment until much later.

11.13.2023

not that close

His close reading of poems was ‘close’, in that it was inexact.

11.12.2023

things carried along

Model for a poem: The wind along the street catches up leaves, bits of paper and other debris.

11.11.2023

fuse public and private

Frank O’Hara’s great popularity surely has something to do with his ability to fuse public and private, to capture those moments of everyday life when we respond, overtly or just subliminally, to the “breaking news” of the day.

—Marjorie Perloff, on “Poem (Khrushchev is coming on the right day!),” The Difference is Spreading: Fifty Contemporary Poets on Fifty Poems (U. of Penn Press, 2022)

11.09.2023

epigram for one book

The time I took
to make this book,
being both debut
and long review.