ejp626 Posted October 9, 2011 Author Report Posted October 9, 2011 (edited) So I've been checking out the Vancouver library. It's pretty nice for a city roughly the size of San Francisco. I was impressed by their poetry section. They seem to have almost the entire run of August Kleinzahler's recent works and a pretty complete set of Charles Simic. They even have one I haven't gotten to yet (Master of Disguises), so I checked this out. Several sections are very similar to Simic's previous work, which strikes me as a kind of melancholy urban reverie (not totally dissimilar to Ben Katchor). I like the start of this poem -- "Worriers Anonymous" We are a doomsday sect With a membership that runs into millions The waitress stepping out for a quick smoke And the yellow dog tied outside the bank, We don't need nametags to know each other. The middle section, however, is more of a rural melancholy, which doesn't work as well for me. In any case, one thing that is different is that many of the poems (in all the sections) struggle with the idea of the divine and the absence of the divine for a confirmed skeptic (who may in fact wish for the comforts of faith but is denied them). This may make the book more or less interesting for those who are more used to Simic as a poet who has a bit of a smirk about him. And I wouldn't say that Simic has really pulled off the effort of tackling such issues in any depth. Here's one example: "I'm just a shuffling old man,/ Ventriloquizing / For a god / Who hasn't spoken to me once." I guess I'd say this seems a bit forced. He pulls it off a bit better in the title poem, however. Definitely not my favorite collection by far, but certainly worth checking out (if you can find it at a library)... Edited October 9, 2011 by ejp626 Quote
Larry Kart Posted October 9, 2011 Report Posted October 9, 2011 Two stanzas from "A Treatise on Religion" by Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke (1554-1628): VIII Then seek we must, that course is natural For owned souls, to find their owner out; Our free remorses, when our natures fall, When we do well, our hearts made free from doubt, Prove service due to one Omnipotence, And Nature, of Religion to have sense. IX Questions again which in our hearts arise (Sin loving knowledge, not humility) Though they be curious, Godless, and unwise, Yet prove our nature feels a Diety: For if these strifes rose out of other grounds, Man were to God, as deafness is to sounds. When that cat sat down at the keyboard, he could play! Quote
ejp626 Posted October 16, 2011 Author Report Posted October 16, 2011 So I reread Simic's Master of Disguises and decided I liked the 4th section a bit more the second time around -- it actually had some of the surreal touches of his earlier collections. I find it interesting that we dwell on some of the same imagery -- keys to lost locks, broken bottles, etc. -- though these are not that unique in poetry of course. Then I checked out That Little Something, which was published a few years prior to Master of Disguises. Not as good -- I only connected with a few of the poems. I think in general his collections from the 1990s are the best: Hotel Insomnia, A Wedding in Hell, Walking the Black Cat, maybe even Night Picnic from 2001. Maybe there is too much of a sameness to his recent work, but when he tries to depart too much from his earlier style that doesn't work as well and people keep asking him for more poems like the earlier ones. I think it is a real problem for artists who kick around for long enough (another reason why it is better -- from a legacy perspective -- to only be on the scene for a relatively short while -- Rimbaud or Jackson Pollack). One equivalent from the art world might be Giorgio de Chirico who tried to make a major shift in his painting style but was roundly attacked for it. One odd thing at the library today. I have been reading Robert Kroetsch's late poetry. The Snowbird Poems -- not too bad. The Hornbooks of Rita K. -- kind of a long and tedious metawork where the author is commenting on short poems by a poet (Rita K.) who has vanished. For completists only. Anyway, it turns out that one of the fairly recent Galway Kinnell books has been catalogued in the midst of the Kunitz's books (so even if someone like me filed it properly, eventually it would be reshelved into its proper, i.e. wrong location). The librarian just sort of threw up his hands and said that sometimes the Dewey decimal system was off. Frankly, that strikes me as unlikely. I think it is more likely that when the book came through, someone on staff put the wrong sticker on it -- and maybe they have a Kunitz book shelved with Kinnell. It's awfully annoying when librarians act as if they are completely helpless to fix errors (and this isn't the first time). When I worked at a library (many, many long years ago), we wouldn't have been quite so quick to admit defeat. Quote
ejp626 Posted October 16, 2011 Author Report Posted October 16, 2011 ... They (the Vancouver library) seem to have almost the entire run of August Kleinzahler's recent works ... Speaking of Kleinzahler, who has come up a couple of times on this forum, I've been kind of impressed by the Poetry Foundation website, which is a pretty interesting resource. Here's their page on Kleinzahler: Poetry Foundation. Sadly many of the audio tracks of poets reading their own works are not available outside the U.S., but most folks here can still listen in. Quote
johnlitweiler Posted October 16, 2011 Report Posted October 16, 2011 This probably dates from the 1970s: Love Poem to You, by Bill Knott I will love you as far as I can throw you then I will throw you some more your veins are carrying us to unanimous-poem climax from my lips escape the mating-cries of extinct animals --now do you understand the radiocarbon-dating process? once I had to leave you, so I arranged for earth-tremors at night so in your sleep you would think I was caressing you o you you orbiting the earth at a height of 5 feet 8 moon childhood mired in light Quote
paul secor Posted October 17, 2011 Report Posted October 17, 2011 ... They (the Vancouver library) seem to have almost the entire run of August Kleinzahler's recent works ... Speaking of Kleinzahler, who has come up a couple of times on this forum, I've been kind of impressed by the Poetry Foundation website, which is a pretty interesting resource. Here's their page on Kleinzahler: Poetry Foundation. Sadly many of the audio tracks of poets reading their own works are not available outside the U.S., but most folks here can still listen in. They omitted mention of his book of writings on music, Music: I-LXXIV, which was published in 2009. The Poetry Foundation page says that it was updated in 2010. I love his poetry, but imo the book of music writings isn't much. Still, it exists and should have been mentioned. Quote
johnlitweiler Posted October 17, 2011 Report Posted October 17, 2011 I think I had said I would include something of the newer poems out of Merwin's Migration, which I just picked up. This one is about John Berryman (author of the brilliant The Dream Songs) and apparently a bit of a mentor to Merwin. I don't know if the audio here still works (I couldn't get it to): Berryman on-line I won't quote the whole thing (you can follow the link for that), but I did like Berryman's advice to Merwin, which ends the poem: as for publishing he advised me to paper my wall with rejection slips his lips and the bones of his long fingers trembled with the vehemence of his views about poetry he said the great presence that permitted everything and transmuted it in poetry was passion passion was genius and he praised movement and invention I had hardly begun to read I asked how can you ever be sure that what you write is really any good at all and he said you can't you can't you can never be sure you die without knowing whether anything you wrote was any good if you have to be sure don't write Aha! Thanks for the advice. Quote
jeffcrom Posted February 10, 2012 Report Posted February 10, 2012 A poem by one of my favorites, David Budbill. He recorded a wonderful duet album with William Parker. This poem is from Moment to Moment. The First Green of Spring Out walking in the swamp picking cowslip, marsh marigold, this first sweet green of spring. Now sautéed in a pan melting to a deeper green than ever they were alive, this green, this life, harbinger of things to come. Now we sit at the table munching on this message from the dawn which says we and the world are alive again today, and this is the world's birthday. And even though we know we are growing old, we are dying, we will never be young again, we also know that we're still right here now, today, and, my oh my! don't these greens taste good. Quote
ejp626 Posted March 29, 2012 Author Report Posted March 29, 2012 (edited) Just learned that Adrienne Rich has passed away: obit Kind of sinking in, and I'm getting a bit bummed out. She was my favorite of the feminist poets that came to prominence in the 1960s and 1970s, although I also liked much of the work of Audre Lorde. I went to hear Rich at a reading in the early, early 1990s and had her sign a copy of The Fact of a Doorframe. This was in a bookbag that was stolen and was probably the most upsetting thing to have lost of the various things that were stolen. I suppose I could have gotten another autographed copy at some point, but it wouldn't have had the same connection. I should say that I am more than a casual fan, as I have 12 of her collections, including all of them since The Fact of a Doorframe, with the exception of the very, very latest (and presumably last): Tonight No Poetry Will Serve. I probably should try to snag a copy of that in the next week or so. Edit to add: So I pre-ordered a paperback copy of Tonight No Poetry Will Serve and even found an inexpensive signed copy of Dark Fields of the Republic (have a copy but it was a bit beat up -- so I can justify it ). Time will tell if the dealer will honor this order or jack up the price because of her passing. Here's a poem that tries to draw connections between the literary and the personal/political, forcing (perhaps) a re-evaluation of War and Peace when viewed through the lens of women's experience. The Novel (from Time's Power) All winter you went to bed early, drugging yourself on War and Peace Prince Andrei’s cold eyes taking in the sky from the battlefield were your eyes, you went walking wrapped in his wound like a padded coat against the winds from the two rivers You went walking in the streets as if you were ordinary as if you hadn’t been pulling with your raw mittened hand on the slight strand that held your tattered mind blown like an old stocking from a wire on the wind between two rivers. All winter you asked nothing of that book though it lay heavy on your knees you asked only for a shed skin, many skins in which to walk you were old woman, child, commander you watched Natasha grow into a neutered thing you felt your heart go still while your eyes swept the pages you felt the pages thickening to the left and on the right- hand growing few, you knew the end was coming you knew beyond the ending lay your own, unwritten life. (1986) A more comprehensive examination of the poem may be here: Yawp and Peace Edited March 29, 2012 by ejp626 Quote
jeffcrom Posted May 28, 2012 Report Posted May 28, 2012 (edited) At the Station The blue light was my blues, and the red light was my mind. ROBERT JOHNSON The man, turning, moves away from the platform. Growing smaller, he does not say Come back. She won't. Each glowing light dims the further it moves from reach, the train pulling clean out of the station. The woman sits facing where she's been. She's chosen her place with care- each window another eye, another way of seeing what's back there: heavy blossoms in afternoon rain spilling scent and glistening sex. Everything dripping green. Blue shade, leaves swollen like desire. A man motioning nothing. No words. His mind on fire. - Natasha Trethewey Edited May 28, 2012 by jeffcrom Quote
ejp626 Posted May 28, 2012 Author Report Posted May 28, 2012 I came across this one a short while ago. I like it, esp. reconciling the dream of reaching America and the reality of reaching America. It is one of the stronger poems from his collection Falling Deeply into America. Sailing to America By Gregory Djanikian Alexandria, 1956 The rugs had been rolled up and islands of them Floated in the centers of every room, And now, on the bare wood floors, My sister and I were skimming among them In the boats we’d made from newspaper, Sheets of them pinned to each other, Dhows, gondolas, clippers, arks. There was a mule outside on the street Braying under a load of figs, though mostly There was quiet, a wind from the desert Was putting the city to sleep, But we were too far adrift, the air Was scurfy and wet, the currents tricking Our bows against reef and coral And hulls shearing under the weight of cargo. “Ahoy and belay!” I called to my sister, “Avast, avast!” she yelled back from her rigging, And neither of us knew what we were saying But the words came to us as from a movie, Cinemascopic, American. “Richard Widmark,” I said. “Clark Gable, Bogie,” she said, “Yo-ho-ho.” We had passed Cyprus And now there was Crete or Sardinia Maybe something larger further off. The horizon was everywhere I turned, The waters were becoming turgid, They were roiling, weeks had passed. “America, America, land-ho!” I yelled directionless. “Gibraltar,” my sister said, “Heave to,” And signalling a right, her arm straight out, She turned and bravely set our course North-by-northwest for the New World. Did we arrive? Years later, yes. By plane, suddenly. With suitcases And something as hazy as a future. The November sun was pale and far off, The air was colder than we’d ever felt, And already these were wonders to us As much as snow would be or evergreens, And it would take me a long time Before I’d ever remember Boats made of paper, islands of wool, And my sister’s voice, as in a fog, Calling out the hazards, Leading me on, getting us there. Source is the Poetry Foundation website here Quote
ejp626 Posted May 28, 2012 Author Report Posted May 28, 2012 On a related note, I am attempting to pull together an anthology of poems about various modes of transportation with a heavy emphasis on subways, elevateds, biking and walking. There will of course be a few poems on cars, sailing and airplanes, but these have been pretty well anthologized already. I actually had prepared a subway poetry anthology, but the scope was deemed a bit too narrow. So that gives me a pretty good starting point for this new anthology. Any suggestions are welcome, though I have to say up front there will be no financial compensation or finders fee for any poem, no matter how good. But you could find yourself in the acknowledgment section, FWIW. Quote
Late Posted June 6, 2012 Report Posted June 6, 2012 Just finished reading (again!) James McMichael's Each In A Place Apart, and again I came away thinking that it was the best American poem in the last fifty years, a work of poetic genius IMHO. McMichael rarely gets mentioned, even in poetry circles, though he was a finalist for the 2006 National Book Award. I was surprised when my book was reviewed along with Capacity. (Four Good Things is still my favorite book of his.) Matthew — have you read any Killarney Clary? She studied with McMichael, and I think all her books are fantastic (she has three). She writes the finest prose poems. Quote
ejp626 Posted August 7, 2012 Author Report Posted August 7, 2012 (edited) On a related note, I am attempting to pull together an anthology of poems about various modes of transportation with a heavy emphasis on subways, elevateds, biking and walking. There will of course be a few poems on cars, sailing and airplanes, but these have been pretty well anthologized already. I actually had prepared a subway poetry anthology, but the scope was deemed a bit too narrow. So that gives me a pretty good starting point for this new anthology. Any suggestions are welcome, though I have to say up front there will be no financial compensation or finders fee for any poem, no matter how good. But you could find yourself in the acknowledgment section, FWIW. This project continues and I have most of the poems I need on subways, trains, biking. I could use a few more good poems about airplane rides, walking (primarily in the country but also in the city) and driving. Do let me know if you have any leads. I'll put a few of the more interesting ones up later. This poem is on a completely different topic, but I really liked it, so here it is. Thomas McGrath Nuclear Winter After the first terror people Were more helpful to each other As in a blizzard Much comradeliness, help, even laughter: The pride of getting through tough times. Even, months later, When the snow fell in June, We felt a kind of pride in our Unusual weather And joked about the wild geese Migrating south, Quacking over the 4th of July presidential honkings. It was, people said, The way it had been in the Old Days... Until the hunger of the next year. Then we came to our senses And began to kill each other. (The spacing is a bit off. Someone showed me how to add in extra spaces but I forgot the details. I'll have to fix later.) Edited August 7, 2012 by ejp626 Quote
Pete C Posted August 7, 2012 Report Posted August 7, 2012 I came across this one a short while ago. I like it, esp. reconciling the dream of reaching America and the reality of reaching America. It is one of the stronger poems from his collection Falling Deeply into America. Sailing to America By Gregory Djanikian Greg Djanikian is a very good friend of a very good friend of mine. Greg's son Zach is a musician who has studied with Odean Pope. Quote
ejp626 Posted August 12, 2012 Author Report Posted August 12, 2012 Winding up the anthology. Still a bit short on driving poems. In part this is because many of the best were already included in Drive, They Said (which not coincidentally was put out by the same publishing company I am talking with). Anyway, it has been an interesting process, diving back in and rereading a lot of poetry. Most of my old favorite poets still hold my interest, though I wasn't as grabbed by L.E. Sissman as I used to be. In general I found that I was not very interested in long poems or poetry series. Certainly in part this is because they cannot be anthologized (or anthologized easily) but just in general I don't have the attention span to read a really long poem -- and at root I think that poetry should be shorter and to the point. Thus, I found I was not nearly as interested in Adrienne Rich's later work. I struggled a bit with Basil Bunting's Briggflats, though I liked his Odes a fair bit. He was a bit of a new discovery for me (I think he is mentioned way upthread). Two pleasant discoveries were that Alan Dugan and Harvey Shapiro had continued to write (past the books I knew them by) and indeed had quite recent collected volumes out (Poems Seven and The Sights Along the Harbor respectively). Even better, I found used copies of these books super cheap (even with shipping to Canada), so I ordered them. Both of them have a bit of wry perspective on urban life. Dugan in particular seems to have written quite a bit about mid-1950s/1960s business life. If I were his publisher, I would definitely try to get some kind of Mad Men tie-in. I'll add a Dugan poem later on. Right now I'll just attach a short poem from A Day's Portion (Harvey Shapiro). This poem doesn't have quite the gravitas to go into the anthology, but it is still fun: Harvey Shapiro New York Note Caught on a side street in heavy traffic, I said to the cabbie, I should have walked. He replied, I should have been a doctor. Quote
Larry Kart Posted August 12, 2012 Report Posted August 12, 2012 Among the heaps of brick and plaster lies a girder, still itself among the rubbish. - Charles Reznikoff Quote
ejp626 Posted August 12, 2012 Author Report Posted August 12, 2012 Among the heaps of brick and plaster lies a girder, still itself among the rubbish. - Charles Reznikoff Reznikoff is quite high on my list of pithy urban poets. It looks like the current collected poems has maybe a handful of additional poems not included in my earlier edition from Black Sparrow, but I couldn't justify ordering it for that. I'll just borrow from the library. Here's a subway poem from Reznikoff: In steel clouds to the sound of thunder like the ancient gods: our sky, cement; the earth, cement; our trees, steel; instead of sunshine, a light that has no twilight, neither morning nor evening, only noon. Coming up the subway stairs, I thought the moon only another street-light — a little crooked. From Jerusalem the Golden (1934) Quote
ejp626 Posted August 13, 2012 Author Report Posted August 13, 2012 So I have been going through some other poets' work. I had high hopes for Alice Notley, but virtually all of the poems that she chose for her New and Selected Poems are truly epic length. While I can sort of see the ideological appeal of staking a claim that near book-length poetry is just as important as novel writing (following in the footsteps of H.D. I guess), I just think it is close to career suicide to do it. You can't get your poems in magazines or anthologies, and you need to carve out excerpts anyway if you go out and give readings. I think the only one whole really gets away with it anymore is John Ashberry. Anyway, I found one of the office poems by Alan Dugan. I guess the other one I found amusing is in his newest collection, so I'll post that later when the book turns up here. ON TRADING TIME FOR LIFE BY WORK The recepionist has shiny fingernails since she has buffed them up for hours, not for profit but for art, while they, the partners, have been arguing themselves the further into ruthless paranoia, the accountant said. The sales representatives came out against the mustard yellow: “It looks like baby-shit,” and won, as ever. In the studio, the artist, art director, and the copy chief were wondering out loud: Whether a “Peace On Earth” or a “Love And Peace On Earth” should go around the trumpeting angel on the Christmas card. In this way the greeting card company worked back and forth across a first spring afternoon like a ferryboat on the river: time was passing, it itself was staying the same, and workers rode it on the running depths while going nowhere back and forth across the surface of the river. Profits flow away in this game, and thank god there is none of the transcendence printed on the product. From Poems 2 (1963) Quote
ejp626 Posted August 16, 2012 Author Report Posted August 16, 2012 I've always thought this was a powerful poem, but today it really hit me. Guess I've been thinking about my mother lately (she's been gone nearly 16 years ) The Race by Sharon Olds When I got to the airport I rushed up to the desk, bought a ticket, ten minutes later they told me the flight was cancelled, the doctors had said my father would not live through the night and the flight was cancelled. A young man with a dark brown moustache told me another airline had a nonstop leaving in seven minutes. See that elevator over there, well go down to the first floor, make a right, you'll see a yellow bus, get off at the second Pan Am terminal, I ran, I who have no sense of direction raced exactly where he'd told me, a fish slipping upstream deftly against the flow of the river. I jumped off that bus with those bags I had thrown everything into in five minutes, and ran, the bags wagged me from side to side as if to prove I was under the claims of the material, I ran up to a man with a flower on his breast, I who always go to the end of the line, I said Help me. He looked at my ticket, he said Make a left and then a right, go up the moving stairs and then run. I lumbered up the moving stairs, at the top I saw the corridor, and then I took a deep breath, I said goodbye to my body, goodbye to comfort, I used my legs and heart as if I would gladly use them up for this, to touch him again in this life. I ran, and the bags banged against me, wheeled and coursed in skewed orbits, I have seen pictures of women running, their belongings tied in scarves grasped in their fists, I blessed my long legs he gave me, my strong heart I abandoned to its own purpose, I ran to Gate 17 and they were just lifting the thick white lozenge of the door to fit it into the socket of the plane. Like the one who is not too rich, I turned sideways and slipped through the needle's eye, and then I walked down the aisle toward my father. The jet was full, and people's hair was shining, they were smiling, the interior of the plane was filled with a mist of gold endorphin light, I wept as people weep when they enter heaven, in massive relief. We lifted up gently from one tip of the continent and did not stop until we set down lightly on the other edge, I walked into his room and watched his chest rise slowly and sink again, all night I watched him breathe. Sharon Olds from The Father (Knopf, 1992) On-line source Quote
Joe Posted August 16, 2012 Report Posted August 16, 2012 (edited) "The Guitarist (Wes Montgomery & James Clay, Hollywood 1958)" Kendra DeColo It is the look of terror on his face— the glossy flank of an open grand piano untouched & muscled with light behind them—that makes me turn away, the saxophonist leaning into the curve of breath, the arc glinting from his lips, almost unwieldy, thick-limbed, the precision of a volt striking the ground. He is cruel, I think, his lips gripping the brass mouth & wood tongue, because he knows he can’t be touched as the fighter who doubles inside the ring, winged fits of blood & electricity humming like a halo around the near-corpse of the man he’s whipped, fists demarcating notes into the haze between them, the guitarist’s mouth & eyes swollen with knowledge he is ill-equipped, his left hand a culled constellation, flaccid above the strings as if to form the chord of a blistering universe, the first cut into darkness, deliberate chaos of the child who pretends to play lifting the wooden body to his chest, who knows what stirs in his cells has no name, the crook & jag, blue smoke, a bud opening in his abdomen swelled to the size of hope as we become the shape of whatever we hold in our hands when asked to lift up what we cannot bear to touch. (VINYL POETRY, Vol. 5, Summer 2012: http://vinylpoetry.com/volume-5/page-32/) Also, and at the risk of being a being a self-promoting jerk, I'm happy to announce that my first chapbook -- THE TERRACES (DAS ARQUIBANCADAS) -- has just been published as part of the Little Red Leaves Textile Series. You can learn more by visiting this link. Beyond that, LRL is a great small press that makes (and publishes) beautiful books. Edited August 16, 2012 by Joe Quote
Larry Kart Posted August 17, 2012 Report Posted August 17, 2012 Roy Fisher's "The Thing About Joe Sullivan": The pianist Joe Sullivan, jamming sound against idea hard as it can go florid and dangerous slams at the beat, or hovers, drumming, along its spikes; in his time almost the only one of them to ignore the chance of easing down, walking it leisurely, he’ll strut, with gambling shapes, underpinning by James P., amble, and stride over gulfs of his own leaving, perilously toppling octaves down to where the chords grow fat again and ride hard-edged, most lucidly voiced, and in good inversions even when the piano seems at risk of being hammered the next second into scrap For all that, he won’t swing like all the others; disregards mere continuity, the snakecharming business, the ‘masturbator’s rhythm’ under the long variations: Sullivan can gut a sequence In one chorus -- approach, development, climax, discard -- And sound magnanimous, The mannerism of intensity often with him seems true, too much to be said, the mood pressing in right at the start, then running among stock forms that could play themselves and moving there with such quickness of intellect that shapes flaw and fuse, altering without much sign, concentration so wrapped up in thoroughness it can sound bluff, bustling, just big-handed stuff -- belied by what drives him in to make rigid, display, shout and abscond, rather than just let it come, let it go -- And that thing is his mood: A feeling violent and ordinary That runs in standard forms so wrapped up in clarity that fingers following his through figures that sound obvious find corners everywhere, marks of invention, wakefulness; the rapid and perverse tracks that ordinary feelings make when they get driven hard enough against time. Quote
ejp626 Posted August 17, 2012 Author Report Posted August 17, 2012 (edited) Also, and at the risk of being a being a self-promoting jerk, I'm happy to announce that my first chapbook -- THE TERRACES (DAS ARQUIBANCADAS) -- has just been published as part of the Little Red Leaves Textile Series. You can learn more by visiting this link. Beyond that, LRL is a great small press that makes (and publishes) beautiful books. That is so great to get your stuff out there. I'll definitely try to check it out. That's so funny. The books look quite a bit like the books we put together in grade school, where we wrapped chapbooks (not that we called them that) in cloth and ironed them. It might help sales (in general) if a poem or two were up on the LRL website so people had some sense of the contents. Edited August 17, 2012 by ejp626 Quote
jeffcrom Posted August 23, 2012 Report Posted August 23, 2012 I posted this a few months ago, but for personal reasons I wanted to repeat it tonight: The First Green of Spring Out walking in the swamp picking cowslip, marsh marigold, this first sweet green of spring. Now sautéed in a pan melting to a deeper green than ever they were alive, this green, this life, harbinger of things to come. Now we sit at the table munching on this message from the dawn which says we and the world are alive again today, and this is the world's birthday. And even though we know we are growing old, we are dying, we will never be young again, we also know that we're still right here now, today, and, my oh my! don't these greens taste good. - David Budbill Quote
ejp626 Posted September 3, 2012 Author Report Posted September 3, 2012 I'm trying to get a handle on whether Charles Causley was ever in the UK poetic canon or not. He hasn't made the cut in the Norton Anthology of Poetry, probably because he was writing ballad-inspired poetry well past the point it was fashionable. I have a sense he may have been more widely read in the 1950s and 60s. The name sounded vaguely familiar to me while I was browsing the library shelves and I ended up borrowing Union Street. I thought some of the poems were fairly interesting, particularly the earlier ones which draw on his experiences in the Royal Navy during WWII (a lot of lost sailors in these poems, which definitely ties in with the ballad form). One of the poems singled out in the introduction is "Ou Phrontis" where the refrain of every stanza is "I don't care!": "But the bridegroom is occupied elsewhere, / I don't care!" "Another the bridal bed will share. / I don't care!" etc. To be honest, I don't really care for the poem, but I have to think that Maurice Sendak came across it at one point, since it seems like Pierre is just an extended riff on "Ou Phrontis." Of the poems I did like, two really stand out (to me): "Conversation in Gibraltar" (which I hope to have included in the transportation anthology) and "Convoy." For now, I'll just report on "Convoy" Convoy Charles Causley Draw the blanket of ocean Over the frozen face. He lies, his eyes quarried by glittering fish, Staring through the green freezing sea-glass At the Northern Lights. He is now a child in the land of Christmas: Watching, amazed, the white tumbling bears And the diving seal. The iron wind clangs round the icecaps, The five-pointed dogstar Burns over the silent sea, And the three ships Come sailing in. (From Union Street, London: Rupert Hart-Davis, 1957) What I think Causley is getting at here is contrasting the drowned sailor, lost in the North Sea perhaps, with the three ships that make it safely into port (as part of a convoy). I find the poem really open-ended, since it isn't clear whether Causley is somehow making a (false) equivalence between these two things, like the safe passage of the three ships doesn't outweigh the loss of one sailor. But he probably isn't saying that precisely. It would make the poem clearer if the reader knew whether the sailor was on a ship that sank (though presumably Causley would say something about his mates) or was on one of the saved ships but was swept overboard or died in some other manner. It is probably the fairly radical open-endedness that makes it interesting to me (certainly more than the semi-traditional ballads he also writes). Quote
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