Poetry.

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (40 of them)

see i don't really go in for the bradstreet for some reason, it doesn't have the stagger i love so much about the dream songs and even the sonnets--feels very dry to me, idk.

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 2 September 2014 18:59 (nine years ago) link

i haven't read much merrill! i keep meaning to. michael robbins wrote a long review of some new selected or collected merrill that piqued my interest. i do love hecht and bishop though. lowell i can't seem to get--talk about needing a biography at hand to figure out what he's talking about!

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:00 (nine years ago) link

almost wrote my thesis on Merrill.

I'm with you on Lowell; I prefer his tortured, more formal, forbidding earlier verse. I used to teach "For the Union Dead" and "Near the Ocean" often, usually to good effect.

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:02 (nine years ago) link

you can also just read the shit and not worry about "what it all means, man*"

*pot

― famous instagram God (waterface), Tuesday, September 2, 2014 6:55 PM (5 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

and yeah this is part of what i like about the dream songs too--even when they're opaque without knowing what they're probably 'about' i think their surfaces gleam v nicely

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:02 (nine years ago) link

James Merrill: Days of 1964

Houses, an embassy, the hospital.
Our neighborhood sun-cured if trembling still
In pools of the night’s rain . . .
Across the street that led to the center of town
A steep hill kept one company part way
Or could be climbed in twenty minutes
For some literally breathtaking views,
Framed by umbrella pines, of city and sea.
Underfoot, cyclamen, autumn crocus grew
Spangled as with fine sweat among the relics
Of good times had by all. If not Olympus,
An out-of-earshot, year-round hillside revel.

I brought home flowers from my climbs.
Kyria Kleo who cleans for us
Put them in water, sighing Virgin, Virgin.
Her legs hurt. She wore brown, was fat, past fifty,
And looked like a Palmyra matron
Copied in lard and horsehair. How she loved
You, me, loved us all, the bird, the cat!
I think now she was love. She sighed and glistened
All day with it, or pain, or both.
(We did not notably communicate.)
She lived nearby with her pious mother
And wastrel son. She called me her real son.

I paid her generously, I dare say.
Love makes one generous. Look at us. We’d known
Each other so briefly that instead of sleeping
We lay whole nights, open, in the lamplight,
And gazed, or traded stories.

One hour comes back—you gasping in my arms
With love, or laughter, or both,
I having just remembered and told you
What I’d looked up to see on my way downtown at noon:

poor old Kleo, her aching legs,
Trudging into the pines. I called.
Called three times before she turned.
Above a tight, skyblue sweater, her face
Was painted. Yes. Her face was painted
Clown-white, white of the moon by daylight,
Lidded with pearl, mouth a poinsettia leaf.
Eat me, pay me—the erotic mask
Worn the world over by illusion
To weddings of itself and simple need.

Startled mute, we had stared—was love illusion?—
And gone our ways. Next, I was crossing a square
In which a moveable outdoor market’s
Vegetables, chickens, pottery kept materializing
Through a dream-press of hagglers each at heart
Leery lest he be taken, plucked,
The bird, the flower of that November mildness,
Self lost up soft clay paths, or found, foothold,
Where the bud throbs awake
The better to be nipped, self on its knees in mud—
Here I stopped cold, for both our sakes;

And calmer on my way home bought us fruit.

Forgive me if you read this. (And may Kyria Kleo,
Should someone ever put it into Greek
And read it aloud to her, forgive me, too.)
I had gone so long without loving,
I hardly knew what I was thinking.

Where I hid my face, your touch, quick, merciful,
Blindfolded me. A god breathed from my lips.
If that was illusion I wanted it to last long;
To dwell, for its daily pittance, with us there,
Cleaning and watering, sighing with love or pain.
I hoped it would climb when it needed to the heights
Even of degradation as I for one
Seemed, those days, to be always climbing

Into a world of wild
Flowers, feasting, tears— or was I falling, legs
Buckling, heights, depths,
Into a pool of each night’s rain?
But you were everywhere beside me, masked,
As who was not, in laughter, pain, and love.

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:03 (nine years ago) link

thx bros

famous instagram God (waterface), Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:03 (nine years ago) link

this is part of what i like about the dream songs too--even when they're opaque without knowing what they're probably 'about' i think their surfaces gleam v nicely

that's how I feel about early Lowell – all that "The Lord survives the rainbow of His will" twaddle which appeals to me on a purely syntactic and prosodic level.

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:03 (nine years ago) link

see that is just so boring to me

famous instagram God (waterface), Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:04 (nine years ago) link

I brought home flowers from my climbs.
Kyria Kleo who cleans for us
Put them in water, sighing Virgin, Virgin.
Her legs hurt. She wore brown, was fat, past fifty,
And looked like a Palmyra matron
Copied in lard and horsehair. How she loved
You, me, loved us all, the bird, the cat!
I think now she was love. She sighed and glistened
All day with it, or pain, or both.
(We did not notably communicate.)
She lived nearby with her pious mother
And wastrel son. She called me her real son.

^boring

famous instagram God (waterface), Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:04 (nine years ago) link

Life, friends, is boring. We must not say so.
After all, the sky flashes, the great sea yearns,
we ourselves flash and yearn,
and moreover my mother told me as a boy
(repeatingly) ‘Ever to confess you’re bored
means you have no

Inner Resources.’ I conclude now I have no
inner resources, because I am heavy bored.
Peoples bore me,
literature bores me, especially great literature,
Henry bores me, with his plights & gripes
as bad as achilles,

who loves people and valiant art, which bores me.
And the tranquil hills, & gin, look like a drag
and somehow a dog
has taken itself & its tail considerably away
into mountains or sea or sky, leaving
behind: me, wag.

famous instagram God (waterface), Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:06 (nine years ago) link

my baseball poetry blog http://terriblebaseballpoems.tumblr.com/

Van Horn Street, Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:07 (nine years ago) link

James Merrill: A Renewal

Having used every subterfuge
To shake you, lies, fatigue, or even that of passion,
Now I see no way but a clean break.
I add that I am willing to bear the guilt.

You nod assent. Autumn turns windy, huge,
A clear vase of dry leaves vibrating on and on.
We sit, watching. When I next speak
Love buries itself in me, up to the hilt.

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:12 (nine years ago) link

there is a bizarre corner of youtube where you find something called "henrycore" where some weirdo has matched berryman reading dream songs with various eminem beats and its awful and weird

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:13 (nine years ago) link

pfft, swordplay

famous instagram God (waterface), Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:13 (nine years ago) link

xpost

famous instagram God (waterface), Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:13 (nine years ago) link

gosh i like that 'a renewal'

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:14 (nine years ago) link

check out Divine Comedies, Hoos, although his last volume A Scattering of Salts is as strong as his other work. I love the guy. As much as I admire Auden, in some ways he surpassed him in play, charm, and unfussy wisdom.

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:16 (nine years ago) link

interesting! i do like auden a lot, i'll take that comparison under advisement

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 2 September 2014 19:17 (nine years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.