Pages

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.

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Poems for Nov. 20-21


Remembering the Night I Dreamed Paul Klee Married the Sky by Jack Ridl  (for Pittsford )
Mercy by Kelly Weber
Even-keeled and At-eased  by Alberto Rios
Presidents’ Day by Louise Glück
Snowflakes by  Howard Nemerov
Club Icarus by Matt W. Miller
Emancipation Proclamation by William Heyen
Ȟe Sápa, Five[1]  by Layli Long Soldier
November Night by Adelaide Crapsey   
For the Anniversary of My Death BY W. S. MERWIN


The next four poems were in last week's line-up but not discussed by Pittsford.   Rundel  did discuss the Jack Ridl the week before:
Discussion: people felt the dream was about the homeless.  My favorite lines:
Above us, the old sky held 

its cross-stitch of stars and we half expected the light to shiver in our back pockets.
It was just that we knew. It was


just that it was cold.

Do you want to pronounce the emphasis on "just" -- to mean, it was "fair"... or "simply" -- or maybe put the accent on THAT.
Now, "just" takes on a sense of "only".  I love the stanza break-- the sky has a large space to hold before mentioning stars!
The long space after "it was" holds the dream perhaps existentially, or simply as  if to remember it...  The placing of the spoon across his palm.. perhaps to remind him to eat? although normally one would say "on" or "in his palm".  
The last sentence starts with a dangling "I"
(remember how big the napkins were".

My question: How does unraveling the complexity of  this poem  feel satisfying?  frustrating?  Knowing Paul Klee and his use of stars, 
it feels like an ekphrastic poem.  Why do we remember certain things?

2. Mercy: Comments:  We enjoyed the strength in the horses, and how we can see something that can harm us… but only see the positive aspect of the strength.
3. Rios:
We howled at the fun...  a sense of Mary Poppins. or  Bad Tuesday and Bad Wed/.  acting “owl-ly”
The mobius strip effect.  In French, when misbuttoning a shirt, one does say,  the buttons line up like Sunday with Monday... In Spanish, I didn't find such an expression, but was reminded that mañana can mean both "morning" and "tomorrow".
Of course, the poem is making fun of conventions -- the right laugh... to look natural as if without a care... How, in the case of Rios,  he could be referring to  balancing the poet/teacher in him,  as well as the Latino to get along… 
"Even-keeled" is  at odds with “at-eased” — action done to you…
How do we contract with the world… corporate world.. cultural divide… get along?

Judith and David brought up Hamlet… Act. 1 sc 2:  I know not seems.

President's Day". We enjoyed the flippant tone of this poem which appeared first in January 2009.
January 4, 2009
Discussion: Loved the superstition of snow vs. salt... the present losses, the memory of sunshine,
how joyful to bask in it... The Great Recession—which officially lasted from December 2007 to June 2009—began with the bursting of an 8 trillion dollar housing bubble. ... In the post-World War II recessions before the early 1990s, it took an average of 10 months for the economy to regain the jobs it had lost during the recession.

Snowflakes by Howard Nemerov -- a pearl of a poem!  One sentence in 4 lines that is filled with sound, each line interrupted by hesitation; iambic conclusion. rhythm…
difference between prose and poetry… snow as metaphor across time.and addresses the nature of the soul...   Why not treasured in heaven?  Nature of the soul… a sense of Paradise Lost; rebellion in heaven.  book of revelations.   No two of anything alike. 


 Note that the Emancipation Proclamation is from Poets’ Walk.  Here is a listing of poems alphabetized by poets last name: https://mag.rochester.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/PoetsWalk-Alpha.pdf. To see/hear a poem, you need to use the cross-listing and click on the carved words (alphabetized here:   https://mag.oncell.com/en/poets-walk-78374.html.). A little booklet of “fun” with the poems:

For Pittsford:
 am pleased to share that my poem “Ugliness came up” was posted today here: 

There were many references that came up  today —

and Hamet, Act I, sc 2: 
“Seems,” madam? Nay, it is. I know not “seems.”
'Tis not alone my inky cloak, good mother,
Nor customary suits of solemn black,
Nor windy suspiration of forced breath,
80No, nor the fruitful river in the eye,
Nor the dejected 'havior of the visage,
Together with all forms, moods, shapes of grief,
That can denote me truly. These indeed “seem,”
For they are actions that a man might play.
85But I have that within which passeth show,
These but the trappings and the suits of woe.

**
2. For the Matt Turner poem “Club Icarus”:  not only Auden, “Musée des Beaux Arts” http://english.emory.edu/classes/paintings&poems/auden.html
(link shows the Brueghel painting)
but when someone brought up “Ignorance is Bliss” — the full context in the Gray poem here:

and another poem in his collection Club Icarus: 
Judith adds  this to the Icarus discussion from  Carol Ann Duffys book  https://genius.com/Carol-ann-duffy-frau-freud-annotated that
She mentions “Mrs. Icarus” is opposite the page with Mrs Freud’s poem—"a perfect sonnet, composed mostly of synonyms for The Freudian organ.”
Mrs Icarus
I’m not the first or the last/to stand on a hillock,
watching the man she married/prove to the world
that he’s a total, utter, absolute, Grade A pillock.
Mark your calendars:  December 8: 4-6 pm a solstice celebratio
**
3. The anaphor, “whereas”— in the Heyen poem reminded Emily of Christopher Smart’s  poem for his cat:

4. For the Layli Long Soldier
Joy Harjo speaks of the “ancestor tree of poetry”…  and makes this reference to Layli:
Layli Long Soldier’s poems emerge from fields of Lakota history where centuries stack and bleed through making new songs. The sacred and profane tangle and are threaded into the lands guarded by the four sacred mountains in the poetry of Sherwin Bitsui. America has always been multicultural, before the term became ubiquitous, before colonization, and it will be after.

5.  I did read the Adelaide Crapsey Cinquain on Poets Walk
November Night by Adelaide Crapsey   
Listen!
With faint dry sound
like steps of passing ghosts
the leaves, frost-crisped break from the trees
and fall

and mentioned the closing lines of the Poets Walk selection of Merwin’s poem
For the Anniversary of My Death 
Every year without knowing it I have passed the day   
When the last fires will wave to me
And the silence will set out
Tireless traveler
Like the beam of a lightless star

Then I will no longer
Find myself in life as in a strange garment
Surprised at the earth
And the love of one woman
And the shamelessness of men
As today writing after three days of rain
Hearing the wren sing and the falling cease
And bowing not knowing to what

6. In closing, Maura shared Leo Buscaglia’s children’s book, the fall of Freddy the Leaf — captured here in video.

poems for Nov. 13-4

A Bowl of Fruit — Stephen Dunn
The Inheritance by Stephen Dunn 
Documentary — by David Ruekberg
The Falling Body by Abby E. Murray
In Praise of Air by Simon Armitage
Reel — by Barbara Crooker
November by Maggie Dietz


Stephen Dunn seems to find pleasure in the “messiness of theory” as he “paints in words”  the play of ideas and things while teasing his colleague who clearly prefers examining analysis over givens.  The fun of parenthetical remarks, poking fun at himself, rhyming oranges with oranges, intending that his intention seem spontaneous, etc.  Bernie gave some background about his last book, Local Visitation

Bernie shared this article : From Blackbird, an online journal of literature and the arts, Fall 2003, Vol2, #2 - by Ron Smith which speaks about "A Bowl of Fruit" 

Dunn's poems stand alone as individual works of art. But together, in groups and sequences, they suggest more intricate patterns and concerns, more comprehensive and complex themes. After its prefatory first poem, Local Visitations is divided into three major sections, "Sisyphus and Other Poems," "Here," and "Local Visitations." The very first part of the book is, I think, by far the most interesting, significant, and successful.

From the beginning, Local Visitations foregrounds Dunn's increasing tendency to emphasize the artifice in the art. The book opens with "A Bowl of Fruit," a poem which presents this epigraph attributed to Professor Jeanne-Andrée Nelson: "For me, the pleasure of poetry is taking it apart." Dunn's poem responds to the wrongheaded notion of reading that such a quotation implies. "A Bowl of Fruit" begins by addressing Nelson and also referring directly to itself: "Jeanne, I have spent days arranging / this bowl of fruit, all for you, / knowing how much you like fruit / (not to eat but to examine)." As we might expect from Dunn, "A Bowl of Fruit" is a good-natured attack, a moderate chiding, really, which in fact modulates from friendly lampoon to "seduction." Wordsworth's "The Tables Turned" ("We murder to dissect," the great Romantic had fairly hissed) seems downright violent next to Dunn's amused, crafty correction. Dunn merely causes his "still life [to break] open / into life, the discovery that the secret worm [in the apple], / if real, will not permit you any distance." The gentle mischievousness, the light touch with allusions (the book of Genesis, Blake's "The Sick Rose"), the generous restraint displayed toward his chosen antagonist, the easy, unapologetic employment of the familiar if not the cliché (the apple and its worm)—these are recognizable Dunn qualities. However, the Brechtian, or if you prefer, postmodern, flouting of literary illusionism is new in Dunn, or at least new in its level of up-front audacity. Through it, Dunn continues to insist on the artist's necessary paradox: Only by embracing art can we truly embrace life (and vice versa, of course). The Freudian playfulness of the phallic worm is natural here, since the speaker is in fact the poet. 

The group found the first poem a delightful exploration of the process of writing, using still-life and life.  The Jeanne in question, is one of Dunn's colleagues and professor of French.  We loved the playful non-rhymes, the sounds and allusions such as  " The unexamined life is not worth living…"  Pittsford's discussion brought to mind, Wordsworth, "We murder to dissect".  Hard to resist thinking about  pears... St. Augustine. https://augustinianvocations.org/blog-archive/2017/1/19/st-augustine-and-the-pear-tree-a-lasting-story. John brought up Eric Satie,  poire https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VQmuAr93OlI --  "Nothing to do with that side; must look for something else or I am lost."


 We listened to Stephen Dunn read his poem “The Inheritance”   https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/09/04/the-inheritance-stephen-dunn  where his voice seems resigned, and tired.  Although he does not articulate well, the tone is kindly… He seems to be talking to himself, reviewing expectations and disappointments, not particularly pleased where he ended up.  Perhaps the inheritance is something that defines him, but his last two sentences break out of resignation with the “why not” argument turning what sounds like an aphorism about being a guest in your own home into a more complicated reflection that concerns “almost” everyone, and accepting of the fact that feeling troubled is more universal than one may think.  He plays with “vanity dogging one’s days” by personifying it into a clownish dog.  Throws in a little Great Gatsby with a “while your at it” job description of referee for “the uncertainties of the night”.  

The Pittsford group felt the poem was visiting a retirement home.  It's an uneasy feeling of viewing fractured truth... and yet, one senses  a kind of generosity in it… 
Summaries by various members: the road to paradise is paradise; accept what is the way it is without hoping for a silver lining. Don’t worry about reconciling doubts with realities (but isn’t it a comfort for those of us who do, that he wishes for this).  The clever use of "you" as if talking to himself, but also the reader.

It was a pleasure to have the visit of David Ruekberg poet who read his poem aloud.  We loved the long dinosaur period juxtaposed with blink.  Our “blink” in time won’t be as long as that!   
He captures the sense of the “old dance”, the “round of seasons” echoed in the poem.
“reel”… The snapshots of being an English teacher, references to neighborly love, voting, medecine, juxtaposed with the environment is effective… returning to the old score where old dogs just call tricks by a different name.  Important questions:  why we shy away from interrogating ourselves… yet seek answer, ache for belonging.  The last image of “uncorking a bottle” — the symbolic blessing of a new ship, but loaded with warheads named after mothers is brilliant.  There’s an echo of “bulwarks” we have constructed. As one person, the poem is filled with “impingements of opposites.”
Discussion  included  climate change, environmental concerns, habits.  David spoke of inspiration for the poem... the Baltimore science museum… sense of time moving. How a poem allows ideas to morph.  Jan felt it ressembled a Zen Koan; David remarked references to Frost.  
One square inch of silence brought up the  Hoh Forest : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One_Square_Inch_of_Silence

The Falling Body sketches the parallel of falling in war, with the poet’s daughter falling down stairs, where the couplets indeed feel like like stairs,  and the story clatters and accelerates down them-- both the actual fall, but also the sense of the father's ptsd.  The last line confirms, the indifference of the crowd to either fall.  

I read aloud another Abby Poem, that speaks of the "ache of the unsaid", the "things not done; responsibilities not met; old friends uncalled; letters of concern unwritten... a life of excuses littered around her".  She is deservedly Poet Laureate of Tacoma!

We loved the Armitage and Elaine brought up the fact that the poem was printed on a wall with Titanium oxide:
May 14, 2014 - In Praise of Air: Poem displayed on the University's Alfred Denny Building ... “This poem alone will eradicate the nitrogen oxide pollution created by ... on is coated with microscopic pollution-eating particles of titanium dioxide ...We enjoyed the theatricality of the 3rd stanza:                    
 like Christopher Marlowe; stage talk… 

Among the jumbled bric-a-brac I keep                                   
a padlocked treasure-chest of empty space,
and on days when thoughts are fuddled with smog
or civilization crosses the street...

the image of "cars blow kisses to our lips from theirs"-- a mental image of crowded cities.. 
and how "air" has the last word... with the pun of the last line:
"My first word, everyone's first word, was air".  

The "ai" in  praise, and air; lots of slant rhyme....  And the power of a child's first word -- which sounds like "air".

Reel:  delightful 13 lines replete with alliterations, enjambments, "maybe" answered by "of course" followed by "but right now" -- mid-Fall preparing for winter a perfect metaphor for how to meet the end of life.

Maggie Dietz takes 6 tercets to look at November.  Chestnuts are "busted"... the sky, "hardened plastic" hovers.  the "pasty" river coughs up reed grass... the days throw up a closed sign around four.
comments: Elocution required!  can’t read this w/ mashed-potatoes in the mouth. If you have any doubt, Dietz lets you know:  show’s over -- the 1 + 3 end rhymes, visual and sound imagery coordinate.  We enjoyed it, but wondered why the Capitals at the beginning of each line.   




no meeting Wed. 11/26 or Thanksgiving, 11/27

However, I did send this:
Gratitude — Jon Davis

my favorite lines:
opening
Forget each slight, each head that turned
Toward something more intriguing—

and other forgettings...

Remind yourself you never wanted them.  (honors, recognition)
When the spotlight briefly shone on you,

and the last two lines:

Silent darkness, and you, hidden in that wider dark,
Your refusal a kind of gratitude at last.
Perhaps the World Ends Here”  by U.S. Poet Laureate Joy Harjo
When Giving Is All We Have” by Alberto Ríos
Thanks” by W.S. Merwin
The Thanksgivings” by Harriet Maxwell Converse
Dusting” by Marilyn Nelson
Red Brocade” by Naomi Shihab Nye
A Toast” by Ilya Kaminsky
Starfish” by Eleanor Lerman
Earth Your Dancing Place” by May Swenson

Friday, November 8, 2019

Poems for November 6-7

Walking Down Westgate in the Fall by Howard Nemerov
The Dying Garden  by Howard Nemerov
Soprano by Rita Dove
Rhapsody  by Aditi Machado
Author's Prayer by Ilya Kaminsky
Danzsirley/Dawn's Early by Gloria Muñoz
Small People by Naomi Shihab Nye
Poem for Ugly People  by Abby Murray (from Hail and Farewell https://www.perugiapress.com/wp/books/hail-and-farewell/
Reasons to Love Us,  by Abby Murray

Jim thought this article might provide insight into Ilya Kaminsky’s Dancing in Odessa  which came up in discussion 

So many wonderful poems... so many conversations within each one, as we noted with the two Nemerov selections Judith suggested.  Forgive the typos... you can doublecheck by referring to
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/browse?contentId=33179

The first two poems are a timely seasonal reminder -- but not just one season, or just "weather" --
but reflections on how we traverse passages through time.  As several people pointed out in different ways, the rich blend of sounds matching the depth of the thinking.  An almost sacred feel to "litanies of change", and Chrysanthemums (flowers to commemorate the dead) consenting with the winter...
An entire seminar could be held discussing the inner conversations and echos of Wallace Stevens, Robert Frost... Although published almost 50 years ago, I love the timelessness, that sense of a Western Gate, the setting horizon as time marches on.

In the Dying Garden, the long inner sentence, pausing between semi-colons, colons,  does not feel as if the season is dying, but rather, captures what the Fall is.  I love how both the second (long) and third (short) sentences start with And.  The chime of the "four o'clocks with phlox, hollyhocks"
sets up the lowing vowels alternating between "om", "em", "um" threaded in the "m's".

One person wondered if he didn't come up with that last sentence, then build the poem around it!
Judith brought up the "ember days" as fasting days.  Someone else mentioned-- it's "right out of "everybody", as in common experience,  which brought up the practice started by Morgan O'Hara of gathering people to handwrite the Constitution and Declaration of Sentiments. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Declaration_of_Sentiments

For the next three poems, I selected them from "American Poets"  Vol. 57, Fall-Winter 2019 the journal of the Academy of American Poets.
Rita Dove was the Wallace Stevens Award Winner.  Chancellor Ellen Bass writes :"The depth of her insight is astonishing.  She sees into our most complex relationships and renders those truths with startling precision.  She delivers us to ourselves.  With technical virtuosity and luscious music, her poems torch us with beauty and brutality, innocence and ruin.  Fiercely political and exactly intimate, this is brilliant poetry at its height."  She quotes the first 4 couplets of "Soprano" -- and continues, "Rita Dove could be describing her own poetry."

I asked the group to ask the poem questions.  Why the title?  Why the parentheses around the 4 specifics",  why the thin lines of the couplets pouring out the one sentence which ends as question.
Again and again, we discover there are not answers... but the richness of details we notice call forth associations... Soprano... the highest voice... and David thinks of In Paradisio (Faure Requiem) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sT5Lws5QTgk
 Soprano, as the "spokesperson" poet; the parenthetical possibilities of the room you don't need,
the "thin" lines allowing the pouring "clean as moonspill" --
I don't know if it's a question of just body or mind or who "goes home" gives up... but the combination of question tucked in after 10 couplets "seeding the path" of the voice is highly effective!

Rhapsody or rhubarb -- is a delightful choice set up by the title. Aditi Machado was awarded the James Laughlin prize (for a second book) for Emporium. I'm not sure if the poem is from this book, which "deftly builds up into a critique of capitalism and its plundering."  Further on, the poems are described as "work that comes from the margins-- and from many of them simultaneously... leaving us with an emporium of possibility made by a magician's hands and a visionary's eyes".
Hmmm.  OK. This doesn't help, whether the poem was from Emporium of not.   The poem we read overplays sound... we did not care for the gratuitous Indian script we think means "juice" and the rather flip teen-age tone "like/I get I'm out of tune."  Too much I, and hard to fathom depth if there is any.

Judith reminded us that "rhubarb" is what you have actors mumble, if you want to create the sense of a crowd mumbling.

She has two poems called "Rhapsody" in the following journal: https://www.lanaturnerjournal.com/v/vspfiles/downloadables/Lana_Turner_No_11.pdf
preceded by a rather heady assemblage of ideas in an article about what is objective and what's figurative.

Ilya Kaminsky was awarded the AAP Fellowship , and a general eloge paid to his work.  I selected thus, a poem from his 2004 book, Dancing in Odessa, but made a note about his book, The Deaf Republic  a highly inventive "unfinished manuscript".  The group didn't feel the poem convinced us that Kaminsky is "a tremendous broker for the poetic arts in our world today."

Danzsirley/Dawn's Early  by Gloria Muñoz, won the Ambroggio prize for a ms originally written in Spanish, with an English translation.
The group wanted a longer poem!  One person offered "for si las moscas" means "just in case"--
which makes sense for being prepared for anything -- from flies to whatever metaphor they stand for.

Small People came from Naomi Shihab Nye's book, The Tiny Journalist -- it does have stanza breaks...  one after the first 5 lines, another after the next 4.   The power of her last stanza, with its clear image of "riding on every train to better history... and what we weigh... the three words...
fog, suitcase, tomorrow... -- what is it, unnamed, that has already left... Haunting poem which
invites further reflection.

We ended with two poems by Abby Murray which were satisfying and provided us a sense of being in a conversation with an authentic, human character.  No pretense.  Certainly craft... good sounds and images, and paring down ugly to the undisguised u.g.l.y.  No extra vowels.  If we're honest, see past appearances, understand there's a link between what is considered ugly and the beauty of what we might not otherwise admire.  
Beauties of Yesteryear:  Villon.
Rodin:  She who was once the  beautiful helmet maker’s wife. we dismiss.  beautiful… we might become involved.
longer stanza… coherence.  not interrupted.   
imagery so strong.  gum on the tongue; dotted. 

Beauties of Yesteryear:  Villon.
Rodin:  She who was the helmet maker’s once- beautiful wife  http://www.musee-rodin.fr/en/collections/sculptures/she-who-was-helmet-makers-once-beautiful-wife

Reasons to love us:  We loved the smoothness, how like Rita Dove's one note, reassurance spindles
down the skinny lines.  We were reminded of the  Taoist story of the Chinese farmer, who gets a horse.... it runs off... comes back with another... the son rides it and breaks a leg... but what is bad news, since the Emperor is calling up all able-bodied men to fight in the army...  Taoist theology emphasizes themes such as naturalness, peace, effortless action, detachment and receptiveness.
The farmer's tale captures many of those. In short, it reminds people that it's best not to get too upset -- or attached -- to what happens to us. Even something that seems dark and confounding can turn out to be an opportunity.
Abby's poem delivers that kind of wisdom with an extra dose of empathy.