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5295. RickNelson - 9/9/2004 10:00:05 PM

5290. Ulgine Barrows - 9/2/2004 10:49:38 PM


Who's Afraid of Poetry?
Americans are -- but help is on the way
—By Jon Spayde, Utne magazine
September / October 2004 Issue


Certain national traits reveal to all the world that we're Americans. There's our compulsive informality; our odd need to start off all relationships on a first-name basis; our relentless urge for self-improvement; and -- though this one may not seem as obvious as the others -- our profound discomfort with poetry.



This was a pretty insteresting article.

Towards the end,

...."What's hard is to be simple and even stupid enough to enjoy it in and of itself: its sound, its beat, its strangeness, and even your confusion - they're all part of the mix."


5296. RickNelson - 9/9/2004 10:02:03 PM

ahhhhhhhh, now that's what I'm talkin' about.


5290 is now in 5295.


Very good reading here. Thank you all for this.

5297. ElliottRW - 9/9/2004 10:38:29 PM

I'm afraid of poetry that doesn't rhyme or otherwise provide some easily-recognized verbal razzle-dazzle.

What's wrong with a sonnet?

Of course, one of my favorite poems is one I ought to be afraid of.

5298. Ulgine Barrows - 9/10/2004 11:31:19 AM

Why yes, I'm afraid of that one too: it doesn't rhyme, and makes me question what those words meant to the author, and perhaps me.

5299. Ulgine Barrows - 9/10/2004 11:33:03 AM

Thanks for fixing that post, RickNelson. I tried.

5300. Ulgine Barrows - 9/10/2004 12:11:37 PM

The Red Wheelbarrow....
the first time I read it, I noticed the author's name, William Carlos Williams
and I thought I was in mexico living in abject poverty, things going from bad to worse

the second time I read it, I thought I was a 4 yr old
and ready for adventure

5301. anomie - 9/11/2004 6:07:02 AM

I enjoy browsing here and just wanted to express appreciation to you all from someone with no poetic bone in his body.

I am lost to most poetry and usually avoid it. For some reason I got caught up years ago in cummings and enjoyed his preciseness. I like chewing on his obscure stuff. But I don't think he's very poetic.

5302. ElliottRW - 9/13/2004 3:03:06 AM

i have never read cummings but i know people who write like him in email

In Slate today, there is an article indirectly about a poet named George Starbuck who, it would seem, wrote the kind of poetry that I most appreciate.

(NOT that I don't appreciate the rhyme-free emotionally evocative stuff like NuPlanetOne's House For Sale, above--it's terrific--I just don't think of it as "poetry." Ok, maybe intellectually I recognize it as poetry and, sure, it really is poetry, but not to my inner eight-year-old.)

As it so happens, I've never read this Starbuck fellow, other than the excerpts in the article above, so I'm open to a second opinion. Otherwise, I'm going to try to pick something up from the library this weekend.

5303. wonkers2 - 9/13/2004 7:46:16 AM

Elliott, how about this one?

ON THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION'S RESCINDING LIMITS
ON ARSENIC IN DRINKING WATER

Though arsenic's in what we drink,
It's not as nasty as you think.
Yes, hidden in the stroganoff
It's used to knocking people off.
But in your water it's okay--
That's what the mining interests say.
Apparently in Bush's view
It mixes well with CO2.

Calvin Trillin
April 16, 2001

5304. wonkers2 - 9/13/2004 7:49:21 AM

Or this one:

ON BUSH BREAKING HIS CAMPAIGN PLEDGE
TO LIMIT CARBON-DIOXIDE EMISSIONS

Yes, W once took the view
That CO2 is bad for you.
He says he's had a turnabout:
We make this stuff when breathing out,
So dangerous is what it's not.
From lobbyists you learn a lot.

Calvin Trillin
April 8, 2001

5305. RickNelson - 9/13/2004 9:33:58 AM

Good article ElliottRW.

It's the first time I've read of him as well. He definitely motivates investigation.

5306. RickNelson - 9/13/2004 9:34:49 AM

wonkers2, Those Tillin's are funny.

5307. RickNelson - 9/14/2004 12:07:40 AM


Three poems by Yusef Komunyakaa these will appear on this link only today, then an archive search will show them thereafter.

I was reading "Romance" by Stanley Moss on Slate. It left me with a humdrum feeling. I read three other works by Moss and found them alike. Of course it's not comprehensive of him, but these four poems are what I don't like in some poetry. Again to praise NuPlanetOne, his poems exude the style which Moss falls flat upon. Give me a bone why don't ya, Moss gives a bit of half rotten branch to gnaw.

Now Yusof Komunyakaa in the link above has something that plays along and kept me reading. I don't follow why older writers get off on the historical references, but maybe someday I will. I do get off on the black man compendiousness of his themes. Of course I have to take his word for it, but seems like a good bet to me.

Gotta love Y.K.

5308. RickNelson - 9/14/2004 12:32:33 PM

The yet to end stream
pebbly washes flicker
and star glare in my eyes
set upon a glittered sun beam.

Frogs, crickets and flies
are background percussion
and strings. As senses are attune
of the drift of air to my ears and eyes.

The air moves past clean stands of pine,
whose aged bark are slate like variegations.
And each step through brushing grasses,
is perfumed by a wind blown pantomime.





I started this poem today. I'm worried about time that I'll have for writting.

5309. Ulgine Barrows - 9/15/2004 3:41:38 PM

ODE TO FLATULENCE

Sometimes, there's a mis-step
The dragon in the background
Chews up your insides


Solemnly, you lift a cheek
Solar panels flare
Airborne

5310. Ulgine Barrows - 9/15/2004 3:43:19 PM

Errr... you'll make the time, if you want.

5311. Ulgine Barrows - 9/15/2004 3:53:18 PM

Anything's better than THAT.

where's tmesis,VNuPlanetOne, JustEars?

5312. RickNelson - 9/23/2004 3:00:06 PM

Republican's got the little ditto head
the little ditto head, the little ditto head
Republican's got the little ditto head
yeah, yeah, yeah--

And Al Franken smacks the big one.

5313. NuPlanetOne - 9/23/2004 7:21:00 PM




Elliott I too somehow feel that unrhymed poetry is somewhat less poetic in a sense than rhymed verse. But I am getting over that. I mostly write some rhyme scheme into my stuff, but I also have written things I liked without rhyming. And it may be that the bulk of poetry is unrhymed. Anyone got stats? Anyway, thanks rick for comparing me to anyone, especially when I come out on top..lol.

5314. NuPlanetOne - 9/23/2004 7:21:28 PM

/
/
Watching and Wishing

Boy! This TV really makes it all
Looked so connected
Like we are all together
Like we were all collected
And put here on a stage
Oh, not to strut in rage
In some melodramatic soliloquy
Demanding to know what will I be
But placed and spaced
Into far reaching corners
That once in days gone by
No one would even try
To get to. Even if they would let you
They simply didn’t exist
Because they were so far away
Fifty miles was enough to enlist
Help and special planning
Yet now I sit and watch
People in conflict beyond the hill
Beyond the ocean, the mountains
With no messenger to kill
Strangers with a holy will
To destroy all that disagree
There’s no hiding or abiding
By rules. No one is denying
No one is even trying to evade
Or mollify their intentions
And it is disturbing, unnerving
It feels like I am swerving
To avoid a catastrophe
And it ruins my day
Upsets my week-ends
Interrupts my dinner and
I fear I will grow thinner
And anxious and I hope
Soon, they will declare a winner
When I tune in later
And see those people far away
I wish they could say
They are gone.

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