The dawn is a term for the early morning used by poets and other people who don’t have to get up.
—Oliver Herford
11.30.2025
11.29.2025
flash to ash
The poem composed in a flash, and any revision would leave only ash.
Labels:
against revision,
ash,
compostion,
flash,
revision
11.28.2025
dead dead
He went back to revise the poem not realizing rigor mortis had set in.
Labels:
dead,
revision,
rigor mortis
11.26.2025
from other tongues
Often it’s non-native speakers who write the most beautiful English sentences.
Labels:
English,
non-native speaker,
sentences
11.25.2025
root cellar
You haven’t gone down to basement of this poem. There's a root cellar with a door hanging by one hinge waiting to be pushed open.
Labels:
basement,
door,
going deep,
root cellar
11.24.2025
worth the effort
Spend the time revising this poem, or just spin up a new one.
Labels:
compostion,
new poem,
revise,
revision,
spin up
11.22.2025
gifting library
Don’t ask me how many books I own—ask how many I’ve read and passed on.
Labels:
books,
gift,
loan,
personal library
11.20.2025
poet praising poet
I love a good homage poem—a poet praising another poet—knowing how hard it is to write even a few poems that make themselves known and at the same time matter.
11.19.2025
other voice
I am asserting that poetry is irreducible to ideas and system. It is the other voice. Not the word of history or of antihistory but the voice that, in history, always says something else—the same something since the beginning. I don’t know how to define this voice or explain what it is that constitutes this difference, this tone which, though it doesn’t set it altogether apart, makes it unique and distinct. I will say only that it is strangeness and familiarity in person. We need only hear it to recognize it.
—Octavio Paz, “Latin-American Poetry,” Convergences: Essays on Art and Literature (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1987)
—Octavio Paz, “Latin-American Poetry,” Convergences: Essays on Art and Literature (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1987)
11.18.2025
stands aside
The poet stands aside: Someone standing in the shadow of the doorway, waiting for hours for who knows what.
11.16.2025
light fare
He’d tasted some of this, some of that,
but he never made a meal of one book,
nor had he ever feasted for days
at the banquet of an author’s oeuvre.
but he never made a meal of one book,
nor had he ever feasted for days
at the banquet of an author’s oeuvre.
11.13.2025
11.11.2025
reel off
When you realize you can really write, I mean you can reel off line after line effortlessly, that’s when you need to set some limits.
Labels:
effortless,
facility,
limits,
reel off,
write at will
11.10.2025
more than speech
When reading your poetry consider: enunciation, pace, pauses (silence), tone and modulation. Some poets aren’t blessed with pleasing voices, but they can thoughtfully manage their speech patterns to better present their poetry.
Labels:
enunciation,
modulation,
pace,
reading poety,
tone
11.09.2025
inspired reader
A poet’s function—do not be startled by this remark—is not to experience the poetic state: that is a private affair. His function is to create it in others. The poet is recognized—or at least everyone recognizes his own poet—by the simple fact that he causes his reader to become “inspired.” Positively speaking, inspiration is a graceful attribute with which the reader endows his poet: the reader sees in us the transcendent merits of virtues and graces that develop in him. He seeks and finds in us the wondrous cause of his own wonder.
—Paul ValĂ©ry, “Poetry of Abstract Thought” (1939), Toward the Open Field: Poets on the Art of Poetry, 1800-1950 (Wesleyan U. Press, 2004), edited by Melissa Kwasny
—Paul ValĂ©ry, “Poetry of Abstract Thought” (1939), Toward the Open Field: Poets on the Art of Poetry, 1800-1950 (Wesleyan U. Press, 2004), edited by Melissa Kwasny
Labels:
inspire,
inspriation,
poet's function,
reader,
wonder
11.08.2025
11.06.2025
detail minded to death
A writer is someone who even fusses over the font style of his gravestone.
Labels:
font,
fuss,
gravestone,
style,
writer is
11.05.2025
workshop is
Workshop: Eight to ten people talking about a poem none of them could’ve written.
Labels:
workshop,
workshop method
11.04.2025
kinds of containers
A poem to me is a container whether it be benign like a water pitcher or dangerous like a pipe bomb.
Labels:
benign,
container,
dangerous,
hand grenade,
poem is,
water pitcher
11.03.2025
theme and form
I always have two things in my head—I always have a theme and the form. The form looks for the theme, the theme looks for the form, and when they come together you’re able to write.
—W.H. Auden, “Obiter Dicta,” W.H. Auden: The Life of a Poet (Michael O’Mara Books Ltd, 1995) by Charles Osborne
—W.H. Auden, “Obiter Dicta,” W.H. Auden: The Life of a Poet (Michael O’Mara Books Ltd, 1995) by Charles Osborne
Labels:
composition,
form,
obiter dicta,
theme,
w. h. auden
11.02.2025
in place of a poem
The mountain of text that took the place of a poem.
[A wry riff on Stevens]
[A wry riff on Stevens]
Labels:
excess,
mountain,
place,
text,
wallace stevens
11.01.2025
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