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Friday, January 31, 2020

Jan. 29-30

who will be the messenger of this land  by Jaki Shelton Green
Vestibule  by Chase Twichell
Self-Portrait as Alexa w/ Predictive Text — Alicia Hoffman
We grow accustomed to the Dark — Emily Dickinson
Voice by Kory Wells
Ginsberg by Julia Vinograd
For Calling the Spirit Back from Wandering the Earth in Its Human Feet Joy Harjo

Yesterday’s discussion of poems looked at racism, looked at war, looked at the inadequate way we face “reality”, whether in the 21st century or 19th Century w/ Emily Dickinson observing how our eyes adjust to the dark.  
The comments from everyone were heartfelt… how do we, as Americans deal with a history of injustice, slavery… 

Poetry allows an embrace of paradox… the “on the one hand” the hugeness of the scale of problems… “on the other hand” our small daily lives.

Poetry allows us to look at difficult stuff… one of the poems, called “Ginsburg” told of how the beat poet in the 70’s encouraged everyone to go yelling out in the streets,
“The war is over”… it would wake up the politicians and galvanize action to take steps to end the war.  So, the poet does this.  Walks into a coffeeshop, proclaims,
“the war is over” 

“and a little old lady looked up
from her cottage cheese and fruit salad.
She was so ordinary, she would have been invisible
except for the terrible light
filling her face as she whispered,
my son.  My son is coming home.”
I got myself out of there and was sick in some bushes.
That was the first time I believed there was a war.

**
That poem starts out with the zen words:   “no blame”. 

The parallel perhaps is just as poignant if you write about the joy of skiing, the beauty of snow… the belief that if you stop driving a car, eating meat, speak kindly, help strangers, build a community where everyone is treated with respect, like a panacea…
all lovely in the abstract, until you  tell that to the people who left their burnt villages… 

Does the panacea “fix” anything?  No.  Does it ask us as humans to revisit compassion as a way of life?  I think so.  That engagement helps us be better at being the best we can.

Although Joy Harjo's meditation is not what I would consider a "poem" -- more a meditation, it gives us courage to be the best we can be.

“Acknowledge this earth who has cared for us, continues in spite of the harm we have brought.  Cut the ties you have to shame.  Call on the help of those who love you—
on animals, elements, birds, angels, your very spirit which may be caught in dark corners.”
(taken from Joy Harjo’s meditation “For Calling the Spirit Back from Wandering the Earth in Human Feet”.)

Basically, she says don’t give up:  welcome your spirit, let it rest, after you bathe it, give it clean clothes.  Then invite everyone to a party… be generous… keep speeches short, and help
the next person find their way through the dark.

  You’ll never guess how powerfully your passion 
may light the way for someone stumbling.

**
Individual poems:
Who?  who will be the messenger.. who will carry, help, remember?  We...  the singular "messenger" becomes plural by the 3rd stanza.  This is not a job for one individual. 
Jaki Shelton Green sets up a call and response... her poem encourages us to form a new narrative... celebrate all
the good, tell the stories, "harvest the truths"-- UNBURY all we have not planted... the language of our roots, our
diverse roots... the red hands... the blue breath in our veins...

Beautiful images... 

The second poem, vestibule:  that entry way... the preparatory chamber where we put on the trappings of ceremony, or leave our coats... :/we've killed the earth./ yet we speak of other things."
the two short sentences cut to the chase... ironically, the first name of Twichell.  What are "Wounds to the truth."
lies, silence, pretending?

Alicia's poem plays with "Alexa" .  My favorite sentence:
Now, it is the average day for some to get up 

and talk with their family about how money                         
they are, how they are in this now for good.

A typo... how "many they are" -- but the personal has been transmogrified to cash value.
My other favorite line is the morphing of "maybe" to "may day" -- 

Emily Dickinson -- capitalized the adjective Uncertain along with the nouns: Dark, Light, Neighbor, Lamp, Goodbye, Moment, Vision, Road. 

By the 3rd stanza, we have plurals : Darknesses; Evenings of the Brain; 
and singular (inner) Moon, Star.

How does life step almost straight?  Mike commented how Dickinson has us straddle the question:
do we adjust, or fight the dark, and in so doing, keep out the light?
Recommended book:  
Learning to walk in the dark. by Barbara Brown Taylor https://www.amazon.com/Learning-Walk-Barbara-Brown-Taylor/dp/0062024353


We discussed at length the title, "Voice" -- which can be a noun or verb.  A tribute to a wise mother, a story of how powerful metaphor is... what can you sing?

Ginsberg... and Kathy's story of being in a bar, singing, "War, what is it good for?  Absolutely nothing" and everyone dancing and have a good time... And she asks a handsome man why he isn't
joining in.  "I don't like war.  I can't dance."  He has no legs.  What puts us in our place when we blithely parade our blind, unaware selves?
How easily other people are invisible to us... unaware of their reality, which is not ours.

Joy Harjo's poem was helpful...  don't get caught up in judging it as a "poem".  Native American wisdom.  observations of spirit. like a mosaic.
meaning… 

Thursday, January 30, 2020

poems for Jan. 22-23

How Can Black People Write About Flowers at a Time Like This by Hanif Abdurraqib
Disclosure by Camisha L. Jones
Skating in Harlem, Christmas Day  by Cynthia Zarin
Locate the site  by Alice Major
Naming of the Parts by Henry Reed
Move  by Alicia Ostriker 
I Hum to My Shivering  by Peter Sears

I love challenging assumptions.  First, I note that the first poem is 14 lines.  Uneven lines.  No rhyme.  Nothing sonnet-like about it.  No capitalizations.  Look up the poet -- he's a thoughtful, regular sort who might be caught eating French Fries.  He's talking to me, as a reader about an "us" that is not where I am... and slips in the problematic aspect of humans who judge people and things by what they look like and not by who and what they actually are.  His long run-on sentence ends on the 8th line, first word:  exercise.   But wait... the period doesn't stop the flow of thought, which explains
the exercise that may not have been clear:  an attempt at fashioning /something pretty out of seeds refusing to make anything /worthwhile of their burial.

Wow.  Did you ever ask people who try to eliminate dandelions, how dandelions feel about their
scatter of seed?  What is worthwhile to something alive?  To perpetrate, and. by so doing, survive?

So, what semantics come to your tongue?
What does the image "hollowed-out grandfather/ clock" replete with a line break separating the human from the object mean to you?  A clock's heartbeat, ticking, is precluded here.
What does a million-dollar god look like?  What worth if his heaven is worth two cents?
The "like" is both simile and extension into explanation... he look like to... like used to mean for example.

And how about the 3rd image:  "He looks like..." all it takes is one kiss & before morning ,/you could scatter his whole mind across a field.

So... our discussion:  from dandelion… to the complexity of an individual… 
John:  gentle poem.
Elaine.  Can’t see as gentle. “Just say it…” 
Judith:  misconstrue… 
david: most intrigued… 
something pretty out of seeds refusing to make anything
unless the seed die.. 
Title:  sarcastic? Who accuses a black person for writing about flowers when the flowers provide an important metaphor for the meaning?  What judgement is in THAT question?


They kill us till they kill us… 

The next poem: Disclosure had as lengthy a discussion -- .
The treatment of deaf people as needing to "be like those of us who can hear", as if deafness (or blackness) is a disability that prevents someone from participating fully in society.  "
 "why don’t you get hearing aid.  ".  
all things are possible for those who don’t have to do them… "With people this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.

The voice is not angry.
I'm sorry could be polite, or a different way to say, "excuse me".  Sorry sometimes has a connotation  as pathetic.  A "sorry" state... One does get "hard" with repeated apology for being who one is.  the "hard for the hearing" could be a rigorous defense of those who can't... I don't believe the poet would wear a hello name tag and believe her name is "Sorry... 

I’m hard to hear… (deaf/er people think they are loud…)  but it's otherness that interferes with good hearing... 
If you’re the victim you become the opposite. 
disclosure : making a fact (unbeknownst, secret) known. 
assimilation:  the way deaf people have to behave.
interpreters are for the hearing people… 
America for Americans… where the definition relies on those in power.
I am black because you think you call yourself white.
like first poem:  image.  dictates how to treat the “other…”
I.      AM. -- then line break,  HERE.

How do we "interrupt other people's comfort"?  Why is it understood that if you are different, you must ask forgiveness for being so?  It might be about  cultural demands of the hearing world, but it's much more.

The next poem is not a Breughel winter scene in Haarlem, but New York.  The "Meer" is shaped two ponds in Central Park, indeed, shaped  like a pair of glasses.   Dedicated to Mary Jo Salter, who published in 1994 "Sunday Skaters".
Small detail: in the last line of the 3rd tercet: "goats and compasses". became the name of a pub, misunderstanding                             God Encompasseth.

We'd have to read the Mary Jo Salter... but no one was blown away by Zarin's Christmas Day... Are ice and fire the only integers we've got, reminded us of Robert Frost.

The next poem also had mathematical implications... how we mark with X... how X could be a fall... 
but here, not skating, but flying over North Saskatchewan... how to take measure of a thousand miles of river...
How do we measure?
Judith : pleasing language.  motif of circling… 
how much chance/fate play in our life… 
geometry and geography sandwiched by italics.  lot of fancy skating… but in a canoe… ?
aerial view.  starts w/ human component… no feelings… just surface… 
pleasing imagery… 
thoughts… giving rise to questions… 

The Naming of Parts is so brilliant.  Everybody gets it.  The repetition.  the voice of the drill sergeant, and the voice of Nature.  David had proposed it as a favorite from 60 years ago from Freshman English in college, which 
introduced him to power of poetry.  Listen to Dylan Thomas' masterful reading... 
Paul: lived the poem.  Sargeant John A. Guthrey… m-1 thumb… 
undercurrent of menace.. 
We were reminded of Blake:  The Chimney Sweeper:  the instructing voice… 


The next poem, "Move" -- interesting title:  is it a command… to get out of the way… 
or to take action?
I am so wanting to be in the right spot doing the right thing, as the last stanza says.
Sing... 

I love the last poem.  How to be alive is a privilege, no matter cancer... no matter circumstance.
Peter has that understated conviction.  I know every moment, he could embrace shivering.
He was open to feeling like a happy God. 

poems for Jan. 15-6

Buying Paint on the Brink of War  by Abby Murray
December  by Sarah Freligh
The Traveling Onion by Naomi Shihab Nye
Kerosene Litany by Mahogany L. Browne
Now He Knows All There Is to Know.  Now He Is Acquainted with the Day and Night  by Delmore Schwartz
Excerpt from Nature Poem  by Tommy Pico,
It’s Here In The  by Russell Atkins

Our People II by CM Burroughs


I jotted down on the copy of the poems discussed, this quote:  "We can see spirit made visible when people are kind to one another." -- Anne LaMott

Bernie provided the whole quote: especially when it's a really busy person, like you, taking care of a needy, annoying, neurotic person, like you.

In the first poem, I love the opening tercet... that idea in the 21st century, that we make a list
of "what we THINK we need"... The title prepares us to imagine paint... and by the second tercet,
we understand we do live in times where "Miracle-Gro" and inadequacy partner up to convince
us what needs to grow-- which on the brink of war, seems to echo that idea of expanding territory...
Murray is a master of linking paradox... the timeless (and relentless) details of battle join the idea
of "somewhere, someone" practicing an instrument, with a delicious aroma basking in the image
of a nearby cat, warming itself "like a yeasted loaf in the sun."  

The idea of living beings"elsewhere" and "somewhere" is a comfort as precious as breathing... 
as colors of green (privilege and paradise) remind us that we are "mixing our choices"... 
how tender is in the here and now covering  the walls of her kitchen, while the outside world announces the radio announcement of potential retaliationin the penultimate stanza.

The poem ends on the universal thought, both positive and negative of the fallacy of endings--
how battles in the way we live, memories we keep of loved one, "never end".

So much for my paraphrase.  The poem is a step ladder of "good stuff" ...  Emily reminded the Wednesday group of Abby's poem, Reasons to Love Us which starts this way.

There are more
violins on this earth
than diseases.

December has a similar technique -- the detail of a fire escape in winter, where one "stupid petunia"
still blooms (three ooo sounds).  As if the petunia is the one reminding us of choice for insisting on the detail of persisting beauty.

Kerosene Litany is a provocative title !  I found it on Tracy K. Smith's Slow Down site:
The title is  followed by a few lines from a Nina Simone song -- "I wish I could break/all the chains holding me..." and the poem seems to do that... 

 Five stanzas each starting with "today" 
Today: i am a black woman in america
 "                                         "    in a hopeless state
 "                                          "   in a body of coal
today i am a cold country, a storm/brewing
                  a woman, a brown and black & /brew
                   a mother
The discussion remarked  bitterness, yet how hauntingly powerful and empowering the last line
is because of it.    Poetry as first aid…  helps us sweep away dust… anger… hatred.   
Note the powerful, very visceral language: 
melody-ridden vs. bed ridden... 
metaphor of flame... as tongue, as spit, 
body of coal, nameless fury, blues scratched from ms. Nina,
bumble hive of hello...
power of "red pumps" -- both sexual, spiritual and the idea of a heart pumping...
Backdraft:  perhaps this reference?

Her repetitions, accumulations of "identification" transform the inner fire to storm; make the ending
convincing -- the  "awe of how beautiful I look, /on fire" -- a "loaded statement.
powerful-- liberating… or activating…  

fff’s accumulating:
(financial.. food stamps, forgiveness, fury, unforgiving, freedom -- and then 
the 5th "today... "i forgot how to flee from such a flamboyant/Backdraft"

She allows us allows us a chance to understand someone else’s anger-- like
Goya — I saw this.  sketches about war.
makes you feel less alone…

Delmore Schwartz: His parody of Frost comes from a wonderful book of poems inspired by Frost:
Visiting Frost: poems inspired by life and work of RF (edited by Sheila Coghill, Tom Tammaro, intro by Jay Parini).
I picked a bunch of these poems... this one fit with the selections.  "Now he knows all there is to know".  Baloney.  No one can.  Even the legendary Robert Frost.  Schwartz takes lines from Frost,
tacks a jibe at Frost's "Acquainted with the Night"  along with so many other familiar lines from "Stopping by Woods"...
I don't know much about Schwartz -- born in December 1913 to Russian immigrant parents, died at age 52 of alcoholism, abuse of narcotics to treat his bi-polar condition. The article below by biographer, James Atlas, gives a sadly accurate report:
A year earlier, John Ashbery writes a review, recalling his earlier poetry filled with "electric compressions"... and later poetry as "haphazard, euphonious, virtually incomprehensible effusions"
The poem we discussed is witty, rhymed... even to the extent that Moscow, rhymes with both "ago" and "now", reflecting both Russia and New York... I believe written in 1936.

I detect envy, a hint of  dismissal -- but perhaps also a bit of autobiography:  What "woulds" are promises to a self?  Is death the only portal to know what we do not know... what do we make holy?
If death is the answer... that final exclamation point is one of celebration.
"O what a metaphysical first day and night of death must be to honor the death of Robert Frost."

The Tommy Pico has a IDGAF (I don't give a f...) flavor... 
I was curious about the poetry project... 
Not that I quite understand what he is saying...
Comments: expanding universe… and accelerating…  light we see what is over…
Elizabeth Moon w/ autistic son.  The Speed of Dark…

It’s Here In The  by Russell Atkins, is loaded with S sounds... the language unsettling...
disturbing… There is much huge…  
He sees the crash… collage effect… 
(Taken from the anthology of Negro Poets)

The last poem was the second of a series:  Our People... read slash by slash... 
the first one












Friday, January 10, 2020

Jan. 7-8

What Kind of Times are These:   Adrienne Rich
Dreams, Coming to This  by Mark Strand
Green Means Literally a Thousand Things of More  by Matt Donovan
We are of a tribe  by Alberto Rios

In the Wednesday group, we spoke of how what is said, or not matters, especially pertaining to the first poem.

“An experience makes its appearance only when it is being said,” wrote Hannah Arendt in reflecting on how language confers reality upon existence“And unless it is said it is, so to speak, non-existent.” But if an experience is spoken yet unheard, half of its reality is severed and a certain essential harmony is breached. The great physicist David Bohm knew this: “If we are to live in harmony with ourselves and with nature,” he wrote in his excellent and timely treatise on the paradox of communication“we need to be able to communicate freely in a creative movement in which no one permanently holds to or otherwise defends his own ideas.”

After 1/2 hr, we were still up to our elbows discussing "What Kind of Times are These" -- the echoes of Bertold Brecht... the difficulty of getting people to listen, and fooling them to hear
what you have to say about politics by talking about trees.  Echos of Frost, of Mary Oliver,
Kipling... 
the repetitions of "dark", "dread", and especially "disappear" three times.  Pleasing rhyme of Russian and Mushroom... which also grows in the dark... the negative intention of telling us
it is not a Russian poem, thereby evoking one...  People enjoyed the sense of history... the mood of being on the edges of something important, not quite specified.  We spoke about the stumbling block of "leafmold paradise..."

Dreams:  the poem illustrates what a dream is like -- skinny column... the orderly capital letter introducing each line -- the disorienting effect of the indented 3rd line...
Dreams, like writing poems, take the ordinary and spin it into something extraordinary...
Why do we so desire to capture these elusive, tantalizing collections of hints of our life... 
Strand won't tell you... but in the next poem, "Coming to This", shows you the danger of stripping a poem down to facts.  Oh there is meat... but it "sits in the white lake of its dish"...
and  cannot be eaten.   
Grim.

Back to Dreams and words.  Bernie sums it up with a quote from Roger Rosenblatt:
"Maybe that's the true power of words--
 to show us how puny they are in the face
of everything they attempt to say.
And maybe that's why poets write,
to show the power of our powerlessness
   in a storm at sea.


Rundel really laid into the Donovan poem... Why the title?  An unsuccessful application of Fern Hill if the note about the poem is what the poem was aiming to address.  

Both groups loved the Rios!
   

Thursday, January 9, 2020

December 18-19

On Turning Ten by Billy Collins
Advent on South Hill  by Abby Murray
Santa Claus  by Howard Nemerov
Noel  by Anne Porter
Eddi's Service by Rudyard Kipling




Caring for tiny things can make a big difference.  Act tiny- Be mighty—Ocean State Cranberries
As we approach the end of the year, I think of all traditions, think of the miracles associated with light, preparations as we ready ourselves for the new year.  I loved how the Collins poem reminded me of how I used to be... how  Advent on South Hill invites reflection to re-set priorities in the spirit of preparation for the new year ahead... how the Nemerov reinforces memories for me of Christmas that was not at all a commercial holiday, but filled with magic, as does the Porter.  (the smallest gift felt to me like an empowering treasure, especially a book! or piano score.) I hear in my head https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_nWB_CF3m0c

(Noel sing we), a medieval carol I used to sing with an a cappella madrigal group in Brussels (better than this recording...). Finally, a favorite Kipling, which takes us back to 687 AD and Saxon Days.
Let us be merry!  

We will not be meeting until January, which seems a long way off... 

I wanted to alert you to this possibility that starts at the end of January:
It is a six week seminar that explores "Love and Relationships" in the two works:  Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, and Parable of Talentsby Octavia Butler.  Literary themes include: alienation and transcendence; violence and spirituality; slavery and freedom; separation and community.
Two session are available:  either on Wednesdays or Sundays from 2-4 presented by Master Storyteller, Almeta Whitis at the Black Sheep Theatre in the Village Gate.  

**
Comments on the poems:
Collins:  really fine  back and forth of trivial/sorrow. ending metaphor: 
Final stanza: 
It seems only yesterday I used to believe
there was nothing under my skin but light.
If you cut me I could shine.
                                     
But now when I fall upon the sidewalks of life,             perfect  metaphor for what we can no longer do leads to     
I skin my knees. I bleed.                                                 what used to happen on the real sidewalks as young.

next big number:  90.  
Judith:  A.A. Milne Now we are six.  
The ratchet of age never slips back.

Abby Murray's Advent Poem:  solstice feel;  what is the difference for you between what you have and what you need to see?  Judith thought of Icicles Hang by the Wall...

The Nemerov could not bring the Thomas Nast portrait Santa more alive...  discussion included...
Santaland Diaries — Sedaris. 


Noel: feel of children -- what is the big question?  Where do we come from. closer to “beginnings” — 


In Eddi's service: 
Eddi's Service  by Rudyard Kipling                   1919 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selsey_Abbey
survival.. 
blend of old tale with  3 carols:  ox and ass.  entre le boeuf et l’ane grise.
What Child is This
Little Drummer Boy
Good Christian Men rejoice

I brought up Charpentier’s Christmas Mass… folk tunes blended with Catholic mass... two familiar settings which capture the secular and sacred nature of a holiday which chases away the dark,
brings an excuse to celebrate... 
Jesus our brother, kind and good
Was humbly born in a stable rude
And the friendly beasts around Him stood
Jesus our brother, kind and good.

"I," said the donkey, shaggy and brown,
"I carried His mother up hill and down;
I carried her safely to Bethlehem town."
"I," said the donkey, shaggy and brown.

"I," said the cow, all white and red
"I gave Him my manger for a bed;
I gave Him my hay to pillow His head."
"I," said the cow, all white and red.

"I," said the sheep with curly horn,
"I gave Him my wool for His blanket warm;
He wore my coat on Christmas morn."
"I," said the sheep with curly horn.

"I," said the dove from the rafters high,
"Cooed Him to sleep that He should not cry;
We cooed Him to sleep, my mate and I."
"I," said the dove from the rafters high.

"I," said the camel, yellow and black,
"Over the desert, upon my back,
I brought Him a gift in the Wise Men's pack."
"I," said the camel, yellow and black.

Thus every beast by some good spell
In the stable dark was glad to tell
Of the gift he gave Emmanuel,
The gift he gave Emmanuel.



Monday, December 16, 2019

December 11-12

Wake Up  by Adam Zagajewski
Lines Written in the Days of Growing Darkness. by Mary Oliver
December Morning in the Desert by Alberto Ríos
After Snow by Chase Twitchell
Tis the Season by Bruce Bennett
Last Requests by Owen Mcleod
The Voyage Nowhere by Jennifer Soong
Passage by Joseph Stroud

We started on a positive note... or so I read the Zagajewski... even if you do not believe in soul,
the idea of addressing such an entity within yourself, perhaps your "shadow", the companion you,
that reminds you that you are not alone... I believe as humans, we are wired to need this idea... why
else religion?  Last night, a movie called "Transformation" -- how quickly our earth is changing, and how this has an effect on Monarchs... increasingly, as things change, and we realize the damage
we mostly inadvertently have done to our planet... realize the damage of our thinking about our
importance as we pursue the status quo of our "group" which "otherizes" those not like us, to the
point of slavery, wars, desire to extinguish, erase, get rid of...

I am losing memory... I see notes that I read "A Little Book about the Human Shadow" by Robert Bly, "Time and Materials" by Robert Bass... that I used to love Mary Oliver... I really can't tell you
anything about thee books, except that I often find Mary "facile".  Her poem, "Lines Written in the Days of Growing Darkness" borders the easy reassurance of much of her work...

1st stanza: line break:  every year we have been:
you can stay there... end of the year, cards which summarize the "where we have been, what we have done" then complete the thought on the second line:
witness -- but to what, is withheld...as our eyes follow how the
world descends

 the punch of interest in the second stanza  into a "rich mass" .  This term indeed "wakes up my soul" -- with the idea of climate change, our world is a mess -- but the diversity, the transformative power
remains "rich" and beautiful.  For sure, her poem, from the vantage point of someone in the North,
where we experience "crisping days" of Autumn and days grow dark as we approach Winter Solstice,
emphasizes the passing of the growing, the "vivacity of what was ...
(line break, stanza break after married) to the vitality of what will be. 

This is my favorite line of the poem.  The rhyme of "what else to do" with "love we claim to have for the world is true" followed by the advice to go on, cheerfully enough, is just enough too easy a piece of advice and rather ruins the effect.

How does the sun "swing east"? (not yet risen?) "Doomed" deserves better credit as last word of the poem.  Darkness is deserving of deeper.  interrogation.  To quote Robert Bly, we honor the negative by asking, what do you want? 

The Rios poem, also has the word "crisp"-- not something one usually associates with Arizona desert nor cold "in stark announcement", except in the dark.  The pleasure of the word music, and the imagination in the deeper question "where does the sure noise of their (the star's) hard work go?"
leads us to the delightful image of the great/hot rod skid of the Milky Way across the asphalt night.
If we could hear... if there were a sound of stars in this galaxy in which our tiny Earth is a part...
Rios suggests the noise goes if not into our ears, into the deeper listening of the heart -- able to imagine the sound of a bird's heart beating as fast as its wings and high songs... and provides us the music of words to capture sounds we do not hear in our constructed concrete of cities.  The idea of the "facts of life" as birds and bees, reminds me of  that silly song, "Let me tell you about the birds and the bees and the flowers and the trees, and the thing called love" -- and indeed, Rios brings in
the bees (with their lumbering hum) and wasps, moths, bats, dragonflies -- and personifies them as wondering "if any of this is going to work", and gently slips in, "we humans oblivious"...
He does not point a finger at those of us in cities, hanging on to our non-recyclable styrofoam cups, driving our polluting cars, attached to our i-phones, without much satisfying connection, listening
to "news".  Instead, has us moving/into the slippers of our Monday mornings,

shivering, because we think, (not "is any of this, in this complex universe, going to work")
It's a little cold out there. 

The cold news, simply a question of temperature, reduced in importance by the adverbial "little".
Brilliant and much appreciated poem.

The Twitchell was enigmatic, because of the third stanza where the line break leaves us
hanging.  "The woods look as if they might have" - might have what?  the last line, the absence of tracks? Or, They look as if they might have looked, /1,000 years ago, except for...
The six lines, arranged as couplet, singleton, couplet singleton with each trio of lines containing
the word except for, both pointing to absence, a sense of loss-- like the fact that few people would go into the woods in winter.   I love the title of the book from which this poem was taken:  The Things as It Is where things is a collective, singular noun.  A syntactical move like that invites me to think harder.

My note in the margin on the poems: "dishonesty in poetry".  Perhaps the groups were feeling that truth, as we think we know it, is not the deal, as it is too slippery.  It is more satisfying to discuss enigma, discover different ways of thinking.

The Bruce Bennett poem had  the longest discussion in the Pittsford Group.  Perhaps this is the power of the repeating form -- a fine ballade, that sounds "villanesque".  Soldiers take a vow to "give their life" for their nation.  What is odd about that repeating line, is that it is said by a legless vet in the future.  How do you say the final and fourth please. It feels like a parable... perhaps with the title
"Tis the Season", with no "to be jolly" in the scene of a begging vet ignored by a crowd of shoppers,
one thinks of the Christian celebration of Christ's coming... a celebration perhaps equally ignored and consumed by capitalism.

Last Requests sounds like it was written by an older voice.  Is the crux of the poem about the secret love?  Regret unrequited, begging forgiveness?  We appreciated the vulnerability expressed.

We read "The Voyage Nowhere", admiring the dark feeling tone, dream-like and joining the speaker to wonder about her definition:   "I think and am/ as good as guesswork"... semblance... half-way between silence and mimicry.

We also read, but really didn't have time to discuss, "Passage" which starts with a line from Dante's
Purgatorio.. We admired the clang of the garbage truck and cans which contrasted with the dying
of the poet friend reading Dante.  Can a poem be a guide?  Dante says our life is a passage... how a voice sings beyond the flame building us... Do we as readers subscribe to this?





Friday, December 6, 2019

December 4-5



sent out the poems on Thanksgiving Day with this note:
This morning, I was intrigued by this poem: Thanksgiving in the Anthropocene, 2015. by Craig Santos Perez https://poets.org/poem/thanksgiving-anthropocene-2015. A rather grim “naked truth” to counter with a prayer of gratitude for farmers everywhere: without them, there would be no food.  The last line provides the closing of such a prayer:  “May we forgive each other and be forgiven.

A Spell for lamentation and renewal by Ned Balbo
The Cure at Troy by Seamus Heaney
 Weapon of Choice by Abby Murray
 Muddy by Orlando White
Improvisation  by Adam Zagajewski 
Cage by Rigoberto González



I love the set-up of the two columns of the Balbo poem:  How to read?  Perhaps someone belling
the word "Lamentation" before each couplet in that column, then like a call and response,
someone belling the word Renewal in that column.
The repeated opening line   (quiet of hazel) morphs 5 stanzas down to for the hazel's dangling catkins
which twists the 4th stanza down in the Renewal column In the hazel's wealth of catkins.

Such word play tricks the mind... just as words do... preceding  the catkins, the wavering of willow in the Lamentation column which prepares dangling implying precarious, certainly not sure to stay; wealth a fullness of a moment which rests in the shelter of the willow. From there to cowslips golden hour, to the lamentation for the cowslips common hour.  Note the subtle changes:  for beech tree: Brittle skin/ vellum; for ivy: steep ascent/timeless arc...
The sense of ash as both ash tree and cinder... 

We discussed the fact that the poem used excised words from the abridged Oxford dictionaries.
Here is an excellent article on words, and the danger of relying on a dictionary to prove "realness"
of something existing. http://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2017/10/ever-remove-words-dictionary-people-stop-using/

How do you look at things?  as lament? as source of renewal... as the ying/yang shifting within a universal oneness?  

The Cure at Troy: 
The tone of oratory, repeating what has been repeated countless times about suffering.  However, the rhyme scheme is complex, never repeating the same pattern and often disguised.  Would that hope and history rhyme -- once in a lifetime... 
Weapon of choice: choice is intentional, and the weapon a tool with which to deal with a hostile world.  The description of the tulle screen, with the pearls convincing us we are looking out at the much bigger picture of the Universe perhaps is what is needed to carry on.

Muddy:  We enjoyed the sound of "mud."
Improvisation: The directive at the beginning  is questioned in the 4th sentence.  "The whole weight"? and it's curious how rapture sneaks in, its existence only in imagination, and leaves quickly to introduce the idea of improvisation.  George brought up how moving it was to hear the National Anthem played by a jazz trumpet, and then a sax.  Everything about improvisation is the how, not the what is written down, proscribed, but unknown until you try out the riff, the chord, the notes.  (Quite different, Doris notes, from the President not knowing "My Country Tis of Thee" or the existence in the constitution of the separation of state.  

Cage:  this poem elicited a wonderful discussion in both groups.  For those who did not read the note or pay attention to the title, calling it an "homage to a love poem", it was humbling  to witness how easy it is to read for what we want to read.  The fact that it is the point of view of the guard, and we recognize the kinds of things someone in that position must say to maintain sanity, but if examined, actually are horrifying (Don't you worry as I swallow you whole...) Not the person you trust if you have a broken wing to cradle you  -- as you see more bars and danger, or hold your brittle bones.
Recommended:  "America Eats its Young" by George Clinton.
We are at a time in our country where we are incredibly far from truth.  To call a detention prison at the border for children, separated from their parents, "a summer camp" and say they are better off there liberated from their families is unbelievable... and yet reported.  The cage  "where you can always stay" leaves a menacing sense that there is no other choice.


Sent to O Pen.

A Spell for lamentation and renewal by Ned Balbo.:
Judith brought up this book: https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/oct/02/the-lost-words-robert-macfarlane-jackie-morris-review. She was reminded by the words in the poem, those describing the natural world," determined “not needed anymore” by the Oxford Junior Dictionary. 
It is quite a hefty tome, but worth looking into.

Many references came up with the Seamus Heaney poem:  For reference, Philoctetes is a warrior who  goes crazy on an abandoned island… call it shell-shock… battle fatigue… or PTSD, he is dealing “with a wound that would not heal.”  References to Greek myths came up, such as Edmund Wilson : The Wound and the Bow  (seven essays on the delicate theme of the relation between art and suffering);  Yeats:  Leda and the Swan; the  Novel, Circe : http://madelinemiller.com/circe/ as well as Irish input on “healing wells” and Paul’s instructions on how to use, and his personal anecdote which prove their powers. 

and several more stories about the power of hats.

To listen to Muddy, by Orlando White:
For fun, sing along, as a few of us did to this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AjnOj9O16_I

“Cage” provided a long discussion; a reminder to assess the power of title;  whether or not you sensed
the invisible margins that keep the poetry inside its column, we ended up focussing on what was disquieting in the poem.