Pick a card, any card. April 1st is a good day to make up your mind, like making a bed, or a cake. I would say more but this blog has a strict anti-spoiler policy. But today, in yoga, after making a decision that has been unraveling me like Weezer’s sweater for months now, I poised on my arms in crow pose for a second – for the first time. I realized that I’ve probably been able to do this for months now, I just haven’t believed that I could. I’ll say more when I can, but I want so much to say, here and now, this: Follow, poet. And this: Thank you for waiting for me, poem.
Category Archives: poetry
no more Romanticism!
The proto-Imagist poets first got together on Tottenham Court Road, 100 years ago today. Guardian via AJ.
sputter sputter
Today, during yoga, the Random Rhyme Generator turns on again, and hands this over: “marzipan-pale, mandolin-frail.” What do I do with that? It’s so retro – those are the kinds of poems I was writing in 1999 – and if I ever wanted to describe women in terms of musical instruments (high-strung), sugar, and alliteration, I don’t want to do it now.
To be honest, there is a very, very regrettable and derivative poem I wrote that year, in high school, which is some kind of Rapunzel-Greensleeves-Shalott-courtlylove-clusterstuck, and that is SO a line from that poem, which I thought I had left composting in the backyard of my brain, to feed future poems but not ever to remerge. Surprise. It’s back, shuffling its overwritten zombie stanzas up the stairs, dropping rhymes like clods of earth all over the kitchen floor.
Maybe, as I write more poetry, lines from the poems I was writing ten years ago will keep coming back. It’s like you can’t turn it on without turning it all on.
I wouldn’t use a line like that now, but I’m still proud of myself that that skill, matching words to one another on as many qualities as possible, which I cultivated so exclusively and so extremely for twenty-two years, is still dormant in my skull. (No more rhyming and I mean it.)
The kind of thing I would do now, and I’m about to, is write a poem about thinking of a line you can no longer use.
a slim volume of poetry
The longer I do theater, the more shocked I am that you can get the play’s punctuation, the story, the casting, even the director right. Still, you have to deal with variables like: Is this the right audience? Do I have the right month of the year, the right city? Is the right reviewer coming? So much of it is chance in terms of how the aesthetic object is received. Sometimes it makes you just want to write a slim volume of poetry.
– Sarah Ruhl, interviewed by Paula Vogel
I’ve read this interview many times over the years, but went back to it when I heard recently that her new play, IN THE NEXT ROOM (or the vibrator play) will be on Broadway in the fall.
it gives her the creeps
Here is the poem, A Different Story, by Denise Duhamel, currently published here, at the American Poetry Review.
the wine-dark sea
If your son is not intimidating
On the line of scrimmage,
If your daughter’s report card
Is not the brightest image,
If your children are not turning out
As healthy as you’d wished,
Perhaps on your dinner table
You might be missing fish.
– fisherman/poet Rob Seitz in a NYT article about the 12th annual Oregon Fisher Poets gathering. Participants come from Alaska, British Columbia, CA and Oregon, of course, and even Rhode Island and Florida.
oh, those poets
“Rather than killing it off, modern technologies like email, social networking sites such as Facebook and online media players are helping poets reach new audiences.”
perspective
I spend too much time reading, online, the history of various recent absurd public feuds in the poetry community. It makes them seem kind of spoiled, in comparison to what people in theater have to put up with.
How can they be so viciously and publicly angry at each other when they don’t have tech?
They don’t have set budgets?
They don’t have certain words in their poems who can only show up to the revisions on Tuesdays and Fridays and other words who are only available on Wednesdays and Saturdays and other words who just had their car repossessed and really need a ride to the rewrite session?
They don’t have to worry about paying a cast of eight and a staff of twenty a living wage – or, as was more often the case for me, not being able to pay those people anything close to what they were worth, and still asking them to work for you? And to work themselves, sometimes, into illness or injury?
They don’t have to “load in” and “load out” their poems on a three-month poem tour of the Southwestern states?
They don’t have to write enormous grants to subsidize the cost of their poetry production?
They don’t have to resign themselves to full-time careers as “poetry administrators” in order to have influence, financial stability, or any kind of presence in the field?
In short, what are they so angry about when they get to make their art for nothing more than the cost of a piece of paper?
And I have to laugh every time I hear a poet complaining about poetry not having an audience. Folks, if you want to see “not having an audience,” you should try producing 99-seat theater in Los Angeles. Poetry is pinging and poking and pervading itself across the blogosphere and the Netograph and the InterTextene Conferences with the ease of a keystroke and a backslash. Poetry is everywhere. It’s text-based, for heavens’ sakes. You can circulate it with nothing more than the same tools being used to circulate everything. You don’t have to videotape it, get permission from the Words’ Union, get the rights for the music, pay or exploit a videographer, edit it, to put it online. All you have to do is TYPE. And the poem you write in Chicago or Dallas or Hoboken or Eugene can be read, in seconds, by people in Palintown and Bidenville, at the same time.
I am also learning that poetry, having a large national audience in a way that theater doesn’t (i.e., although more people numerically may see a particular play than may read a poem, that smaller audience for the poem has a wider geographic distribution) has a stickier and more public version of snark. Even people who don’t read poetry read the poetry arguments. The text, snipertextual, has a way of hanging around.
I suppose that under all this speculation and comparison is a level of curiosity as to what will happen when I begin making my own mistakes in this field. Theater is a great art form in which to make a lot of big mistakes, because no matter how public they may be at the time, no one remembers them even one month later. Write a bad poem, and publish it, and I think you never get rid of it. That’ll be interesting.
practicing the art at its highest levels
“When we lose sight of greatness, we cease being hard on ourselves and on one another; we begin to think of real criticism as being “mean” rather than as evidence of poetry’s health; we stop assuming that poems should be interesting to other people and begin thinking of them as being obliged only to interest our friends — and finally, not even that. Perhaps most disturbing, we stop making demands on the few artists capable of practicing the art at its highest levels.”
– David Orr, “On Poetry: The Great(ness) Game,” NYT via Jason at Bookslut, with a roundup of naysayers to all this greatness-is-so-great business.
(Addendum: I finally looked at poet-critic Jason’s own blog, and he turned me on to Dropbox, an app for syncing documents. Now that’s some greatness. )
cathy & heathcliff avant la lettre
“She was never beautiful. Her extreme thinness, weathered skin, the effect of a lifetime of weekly, sometimes daily, migraines and the gradual loss of her teeth meant that she aged prematurely, looking 20 years older than she was. It was her energy rather than her appearance that appealed, and in particular her responsiveness that was valued and praised.”
– Frances Wilson on Dorothy Wordsworth, poet William Wordsworth’s devoted sister, who lived with William all her life as something of a second wife-figure, in the Times Online. Taken from her new book THE BALLAD OF DOROTHY WORDSWORTH, reviewed here by Miranda Seymour, which comes out March 6th. Seymour writes:
“Such was their closeness that Wilson suggests Dorothy and William may have been the inspiration for Emily Brontë’s Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff. Although this may seem a little farfetched – particularly the Heathcliff element – Dorothy in her youth certainly embodied all the wildness of the heroine of Wuthering Heights. As described by de Quincey, she was a pagan goddess with “a gipsy tan”, and “an impassioned intellect”.