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Thread: fragments of contemporary poetry

  1. #286
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    Billy Collins

    From The Oxford Book of American Poetry
    (chosen and edited by David Lehman)

    MAN LISTENING TO DISC

    This is not bad--
    Ambling along 44th Street
    With Sonny Rollins for company,
    His music flowing through the soft calipers
    Of these earphones,

    As if he were right beside me
    On this clear day in March,
    The pavement sparkling with sunlight,
    Pigeons fluttering off the curb,
    Nodding over a profusion of bread crumbs.

    In fact, I would say
    My delight at being suffused
    With phrases from his saxophone--
    Some like honey, some like vinegar--
    Is surpassed only be my gratitude

    To Tommy Potter for taking the time
    To join us on this breezy afternoon
    With his most unwieldy bass
    And to the esteemed Arthur Taylor
    Who is somehow managing to navigate

    This crowd with his cumbersome drums.
    And I bow deeply to Theloniious Monk
    For figuring out a way
    To motorize-- or whatever -- his huge piano
    As he could be with us today.

    The music is loud yet so confidential
    I cannot help feeling even more
    Like the center of the universe
    Than usual as I walk along to a rapid
    Little version of "The Way You Look Tonight,"

    And all I can say to my fellow pedestrians,
    To the woman in the white sweater,
    The man in the tan raincoat and the heavy glasses,
    Who mistake themselves for the center of the universe --
    All I can say is watch your step

    Because the five of us, instruments and all,
    Are about to angle over
    To the south side of the street
    And then, in our own tightly knit way,
    Turn the corner at Sixth Avenue.
    {excerpt}

  2. #287
    Then dawns the Invisible Psycheinaboat's Avatar
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    Bei Dao

    Untitled

    The landscape crossed out with a pen
    reappears here

    what I am pointing to is not rhetoric
    October over the rhetoric
    flight seen everywhere
    the scout in the black uniform
    gets up, takes hold of the world
    and microfilms it into a scream

    wealth turns into floodwaters
    a flash of light expands
    into frozen experience
    and just as I seem to be a false witness
    sitting in the middle of a field
    the snow troops remove their disguises
    and turn into language
    If voting changed anything, they'd make it illegal.
    - Emma Goldman

  3. #288
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    Kenneth Koch

    From The Oxford Book of American Poetry
    (chosen and edited by David Lehman)

    TO WORLD WAR TWO

    Early on you introduced me to young women in bars
    You were large, and with a large hand
    You presented them in different cities,
    Made me in San Luis Obispo, drunk
    On French seventy-fives, in Los Angeles, on pousse-cafes.
    It was a time of general confusion
    Of being a body hurled at a wall.
    I didn't do much fighting. I sat, rather I stood, in a foxhole.
    I stood while the typhoon splashed us into morning.
    It felt unusual
    Even if for a good cause
    To be part of a destructive force
    With my rifle in my hands
    And in my head
    My serial number
    The entire object of my existence
    To eliminate Japanese soldiers
    By killing them
    With a rifle or with a grenade
    And then, many years after that,
    I could write poetry
    Fall in love
    And have a daughter
    And think
    About these things
    From a great distance
    If I survived
    I was "paying by debt
    To societry" a paid
    Killer. It wasn't
    Like anything I'd done
    Before, on the paved
    Streets of Cincinatti
    Or on the ballroom floor
    At Mr. Vathe's dancing class
    What would Anne Marie Goldsmith
    Have thought of mee
    If instead of asking her to dance
    I had put my BAR* to my shoulder
    And shot her in the face
    I thought about her in my foxhole--
    One, in a foxhole near me, has his throat cut during the night
    We take more precautions but it is night and it is you.
    The typhoon continues and so do you.
    "I can't be killed -- because of my poetry. I have to live on in order to write it."
    I thought -- even crazier thought, or just as crazy --
    "If I'm killed while thinking of oines, it will be too corny
    When it's reported" ( I imagined it would be reported.!)
    So I kept thinking lines of poetry. One that came to me on the beach in Leyte
    Was :The surf comes in like masochistic lions."
    I loved this terrible line. It was keeping by alive. My Uncle Leo wrote to me,
    "You won't believe this, but someday you may wish
    You were footlosse and twenty on Leyte again." I have never wanted
    To be on Leyte again,
    With you, whispering into my ear,
    "Go on and win me! Tomorrow you may not be alive,
    So do it today!" How could anyone ever win you?
    How many persons would I have to kill Was older than you were and in camouflage. But for you
    Who threw everything together, and had all the systems
    Working for you all the time, this was trivial. If you could use me
    You'd use me, and then forget. How else
    Did I think you'd behave?
    I'm glad you ended. I glad I didn't die. Or lose my mind.
    As machines make ice
    *footnote...Browning Automatic Rifle, high posered assualt rifle used primarily in secnd World War. (excerpt)

  4. #289
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    Robert Pinsky of W.E.B. DuBois


  5. #290
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    Gabriela Mistral

    TO SEE HIM AGAIN
    Never, never again?
    Not on nights filled with quivering stars,
    or during dawn's maiden brightness
    or afternoons of sacrifice?

    Or at the edge of a pale path
    that encircles the farmlands,
    or upon the rim of a trembling fountain,
    whitened by a shimmering moon?

    Or beneath the forest's
    luxuriant, raveled tresses
    where, calling his name,
    I was overtaken by the night?
    Not in the grotto that returns
    the echo of my cry?

    Oh no. To see him again --
    it would not matter where --
    in heaven's deadwater
    or inside the boiling vortex,
    under serene moons or in bloodless fright!

    {excerpt}

  6. #291
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    Elizabeth Bishop--Robert Lowell letters

    http://www.tnr.com/booksarts/story.h...2-00e1541fbff3

    The New Republic

    Sing for Me, Muse, the Mania
    by Christopher Benfey
    Post Date Wednesday, October 08, 2008





    Words in Air: The Complete Correspondence between Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell

  7. #292
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    Allen Tate

    RETRODUCTION TO AMERICAN HISTORY


    Cats walk the floor at midnight; that enemy of fog,
    The moon, wraps the bedpost in receding stillness; sleep
    Collects all weary nothings and lugs away the towers,
    The pinnacles of dust that feed the subway.


    What stiff unhappy silence waits on sleep
    Struts like an officer; tongues next-door bewitch
    Themselves with divination; I like a melancholy oaf
    Beg the nightly pillow with impossible loves.
    And abnegation folds hands, crossed like the knees
    Of the complacent tailor, stitches cloaks of mercy
    To the backs of obsessions.


    Winter like spring no less
    Tolerates the air; the wild pheasant meets innocently
    The gun; night flouts illumination with meagre impudence.
    In such serenity of equal fates, why has Narcissus
    Urged the brook with questions? Merged with the element
    Speculation suffuses the meadow with drops to tickle
    The cow’s gullet; grasshoppers drink the rain.
    Antiquity breached mortality with myths.
    Narcissus is vocabulary. Hermes decorates
    A cornice on the Third National Bank. Vocabulary
    Becomes confusion, decoration a blight; the Parthenon
    In Tennessee stucco, art for the sake of death. Now
    (The bedpost receding in stillness) you brush your teeth
    “Hitting on all thirty-two;” scholarship pares
    The nails of Catullus, sniffs his sheets, restores
    His “passionate underwear;” morality disciplines the other
    Person; every son-of-a-***** is Christ, at least Rousseau;
    Prospero serves humanity in steam-heated universities, three
    Thousand dollars a year. Simplicity, Flamineo, is obscene;
    Sunlight topples indignant from the hill.
    In every railroad station everywhere every lover
    Waits for his train. He cannot hear. The smoke
    Thickens. Ticket in hand, he pumps his body
    Toward lower six, for one more terse ineffable trip,
    His very eyeballs fixed in disarticulation. The berth
    Is clean; no elephants, vultures, mice or spiders
    Distract him from nonentity: his metaphors are dead. ... {half of this poem}

  8. #293
    Bibliophile JBI's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by quasimodo1 View Post
    http://www.tnr.com/booksarts/story.h...2-00e1541fbff3

    The New Republic

    Sing for Me, Muse, the Mania
    by Christopher Benfey
    Post Date Wednesday, October 08, 2008





    Words in Air: The Complete Correspondence between Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell
    For those interested, One Art by Bishop

    http://famouspoetsandpoems.com/poets...shop/poems/860

  9. #294
    biting writer
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    Quote Originally Posted by quasimodo1 View Post
    RETRODUCTION TO AMERICAN HISTORY


    Cats walk the floor at midnight; that enemy of fog,
    The moon, wraps the bedpost in receding stillness; sleep
    Collects all weary nothings and lugs away the towers,
    The pinnacles of dust that feed the subway.


    What stiff unhappy silence waits on sleep
    Struts like an officer; tongues next-door bewitch
    Themselves with divination; I like a melancholy oaf
    Beg the nightly pillow with impossible loves.
    And abnegation folds hands, crossed like the knees
    Of the complacent tailor, stitches cloaks of mercy
    To the backs of obsessions.
    quasi, I really like this. I hope Tate wins because it seems I can sink my teeth into these motifs with enthusiasm, and I am motivated to read his work purely for myself, so I may just make an Amazon purchase, but I will wait until I know which collection you are going to select.

  10. #295
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    What a passage. Let me see if I can influence unfairly the vote. "Vocabulary
    Becomes confusion, decoration a blight; the Parthenon
    In Tennessee stucco, art for the sake of death."

  11. #296
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    Allen Tate

    SONNETS OF THE BLOOD



    I


    What is the flesh and blood compounded of
    But a few moments in the life of time?
    This prowling of the cells, litigious love,
    Wears the long claw of flesh-arguing crime.
    Consider the first settlers of our bone,
    Observe how busily they sued the dust,
    Estopped forever by the last dusted stone.
    It is a pity that two brothers must
    Perceive a canker of perennial flower
    To make them brothers in mortality:
    Perfect this treason to the murderous hour
    If you would win the hard identity
    Of brothers—a long race for men to run
    Nor quite achieved when the perfection’s won.
    {excerpt}

  12. #297
    biting writer
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    Quote Originally Posted by quasimodo1 View Post
    What a passage. Let me see if I can influence unfairly the vote. "Vocabulary
    Becomes confusion, decoration a blight; the Parthenon
    In Tennessee stucco, art for the sake of death."
    Is this one of your humorous moments which always lose me? I ordered new The Collected Poems 1919-1976 FGS classics, because as usual, TNR is always right and I'd die happy if I could intern with them just a few short months, but I am only a semi-intelligentsia snark, for a crip.

    I bought it because this is a keeper, at least for me, whether he wins the vote or not.

    Delivery date est is 10/16, but I usually get Amazon purchases in about 3 days.
    Last edited by Jozanny; 10-09-2008 at 04:36 PM. Reason: PS

  13. #298
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    Yes, another attempt at levity which is my case tends to be Murphyesque, sucking stones, crutches and mews of the southeastern aspect. I am trying to get FGS...have you ever used Library of America...they are moving and having a big sell off. Mostly classic stuff. Please tell me your remark about the TNR is ascerbic.

  14. #299
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    Adam Zagajewski

    TIERRA DEL FUEGO



    You who see our homes at night
    and the frail walls of our conscience,
    you who hear our conversations
    droning on like sewing machines
    —save me, tear me from sleep,
    from amnesia.
    Why is childhood—oh, tinfoil treasures,
    oh, the rustling of lead, lovely and foreboding—
    our only origin, our only longing?
    Why is manhood, which takes the place of ripeness,
    an endless highway,
    Sahara yellow?
    After all, you know there are days
    when even thirst runs dry
    and prayer’s lips harden.
    Sometimes the sun’s coin dims
    and life shrinks so small
    that you could tuck it
    in the blue gloves of the Gypsy
    who predicts the future
    for seven generations back
    and then in some other little town
    in the south a charlatan
    decides to destroy you,
    me, and himself.
    You who see the whites of our eyes,
    you who hide like a bullfinch
    in the rowans,
    like a falcon
    in the clouds’ warm stockings
    —open the boxes full of song,
    open the blood that pulses in aortas
    of animals and stones,
    light lanterns in black gardens. ... {excerpt}


    Translated by Clare Cavanah

  15. #300
    biting writer
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    Quote Originally Posted by quasimodo1 View Post
    Yes, another attempt at levity which is my case tends to be Murphyesque, sucking stones, crutches and mews of the southeastern aspect. I am trying to get FGS...have you ever used Library of America...they are moving and having a big sell off. Mostly classic stuff. Please tell me your remark about the TNR is ascerbic.
    quasi, your encyclopedic skills tend to astound, which is why as a poet myself I might drown in them if I am not careful to back off now and then.

    Yes, I enjoy Library of America texts as very finely edited, and have much of James and Faulkner and Paine and Sherman's memoirs, among others, and no, when it comes to The New Republic, to me they represent the dying breed of a true American and (American-Jewish) intelligentsia--with the possible exception of Michelle Cottle. Oddly, I don't like their female opinion writers as much--too much of a b----y streak in tonality,

    That said though, their editors made me nearly skid mark my underwear by treating me with respect when I applied to work for them. I keep torturing my columns in near tears hoping one day I am satisfied enough to keep trying to crack their ceiling with my byline. The quality of their work and literary depth is the closest thing I have to a religion.

    Now I have to go look up this Adam Z who you posted. You can pm me anytime. All is forgiven (I'm joking).
    Last edited by Jozanny; 10-09-2008 at 09:05 PM. Reason: name dropping correction

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