7.23.2014

ta-tum-ta-tum...

It takes more than regular meter to give a heartbeat to a poem.

4 comments:

Conrad DiDiodato said...

Derek Attridge's Poetic Rhythm: An Introduction has to be one of the best books on the nature and use of meter and verse scansion. If I understood him properly, he's making the point (as you are) that poetic rhythms, though essential to an appreciation of poetry, cannot be too strictly and rigidly codified. There can always be room for creative unstressed or "offbeat" lines.

I suppose it's in the times when rhythms take a break from themselves, letting in counter-rhythms that can't be that easily captured, that gives poetic language it's wonderful piquancy and fluency.

Ed Baker said...

there is also John Woodroffe's: The Garland of Letters
and Robert Duncan's: Structure of Rime


nothink quite like vowels and consonants being/taking the
lead
via the breath of
in sallying forth into the line/poem?

why disguise our vowels' 'soundings' ?

and
just how many vowels albeit sounds (music) or colors (painting) are there.... really ?


Ed Baker said...

well

kookie what is on the net ! via penn sound's Robert Duncan "stash".. an example of...

which is far beyond any of us talking about" as opposed to DOING the thing:

https://media.sas.upenn.edu/pennsound/authors/Duncan/WPR-77/Duncan-Robert_09_Structure-of-Rime-XXVIII_WPR-Harvard_1977.mp3

not the Duncan piece that I was thinking of... but, this will nicely, neatly suffice to say?

Ed Baker said...

here is what I was looking for/thinking onof:

jus notice.... and open ears to everything. In other words shut up your too-busy-mind and .... listen:

https://media.sas.upenn.edu/pennsound/authors/Duncan/Lecture-Often-I-Am-59/Duncan-Robert_01_Complete-Reading_Discussion-of-Often-Meadow_SF-State_5-18-59.mp3