maybe if more poets read and thought about plath more people would read poetry!!!!
― fleetwood (max), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 15:44 (sixteen years ago)
Have you watched Annie Hall, tabes?
I find Lowell mostly unreadable after 1968.
― post-contrarian meta-challop 2009 (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 15:45 (sixteen years ago)
maybe if people would turn off their fucking televisions, they would read more. that ain't gonna fucking happen, so let us poets wallow in academia and free-lance criticism circles of masturbation plz thx.
― my bach penises and their contrapuntal technique (the table is the table), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 15:46 (sixteen years ago)
i think internet is bigger barrier to reading of poetry than television tbh, although at least the one can be incorporated into the other
― They are known for contracting the ugliest players, like Kuyt (country matters), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 15:49 (sixteen years ago)
Sonnet: Typical Bishop, not a word wasted. She would often pin up poems in front of her desk, a line or so short of completion; some might stay there for ten years before there were finished. You'd think she could have just made it up...
<3 bishop
― cozwn, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 15:49 (sixteen years ago)
i have seen annie hall. many times.
Lowell's best poem is "New York 1962: Fragment." hands-down one of my favorite poems ever written.
― my bach penises and their contrapuntal technique (the table is the table), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 15:50 (sixteen years ago)
what's weldon kees place in academia? forgotten?
― cozwn, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 15:51 (sixteen years ago)
LJ, do you have any idea how many internet-only poetry journals there are? or the number of blogs discussing contemporary poetry on the internet? not trying to be an asshole, but i don't think you do-- the internet is full of poetry. i would say that television has some poetry in it, but it also is a much more passive activity than spending time on the internet.
anyway.
― my bach penises and their contrapuntal technique (the table is the table), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 15:52 (sixteen years ago)
Yeah I meant in my own case. I know there's poetry on the internet, hence the last clause of my post. If you could link some of the better blogs, that'd be nice.
― They are known for contracting the ugliest players, like Kuyt (country matters), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 15:55 (sixteen years ago)
"I got poetry in me."
http://www.popmatters.com/images/features_art/1/100-male-film-beatty.jpg
― post-contrarian meta-challop 2009 (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 15:57 (sixteen years ago)
www.ohhla.com
― tony dayo (dyao), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 15:58 (sixteen years ago)
man i am a total philistine when it comes to poetry. don't get it, don't read it, don't enjoy it, don't really care.
not that this is the right thread to air that out but w/e.
― the people vs peer gynt (goole), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 16:02 (sixteen years ago)
^^ TELEVISION-WATCHER
― fleetwood (max), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 16:03 (sixteen years ago)
don't watch tv either!!
― the people vs peer gynt (goole), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 16:04 (sixteen years ago)
^^ INTERNET-USER
― cozwn, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 16:04 (sixteen years ago)
gotcha
bzang
― the people vs peer gynt (goole), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 16:05 (sixteen years ago)
LJ, look up Tarpaulin Sky and Jacket Magazine . these are two of the best.
― my bach penises and their contrapuntal technique (the table is the table), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 16:09 (sixteen years ago)
grooviness
― They are known for contracting the ugliest players, like Kuyt (country matters), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 16:10 (sixteen years ago)
Best Internet-specific poetry I've seen (turn your sound on): http://www.yhchang.com/DAKOTA.html
― They are known for contracting the ugliest players, like Kuyt (country matters), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 16:12 (sixteen years ago)
do you like FENCE, table?
― Neotropical pygmy squirrel, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 16:16 (sixteen years ago)
All sorts of conflicted about Plath. Loved her at 15, hated by 18, and on through my early 20s. Now I admire & sometimes really like stretches of her: the line is great, but I think she can pack in too much of that clickety click alliteration and pack-the-stresses long-vowel assonance - feels a bit of cheap way to get the suffocation effects, but it does often come off.
Maybe related: she seems to have big anxiety/ambition about being a serious poet - I feel like the poems are gritted-teeth working towards that, maybe too self-conscious about it. I mean it's a stupid criticism in a way - isn't that part of how a poet works towards a traditional sort of greatness? - but when it isn't coming together it looks a bit like a set of learned effects.
Great eye I think - arresting images. I especially like the Bee poems, a few others from before the Ariel extremities, that middle period of strong craft. She's quite an odd British/American hybrid.
I tried to re-read The Bell Jar recently, but didn't get that far. I was going back and forth between being impressed at her knack for intense & precise description/images and getting annoyed at what felt like attempts to impress by extended passages of this.
I've had a steadier enjoyment of Lowell and Berryman over the years, but I'd certainly take Plath at her best over the later Dream Songs or most of the Notebook/Dolphin poems. Bishop over any of them, though.
― woofwoofwoof, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 16:16 (sixteen years ago)
http://www.poemsthatgo.com/gallery/summer2000/redlily/eliet.html
cool site but long abandoned
― bnw, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 16:18 (sixteen years ago)
FENCE is pretty good— I haven't seen an issue since the Spring of 08, but I remember an essay from an issue a year before that totally blew me away: Brad Cran's "Cinéma Vérité and the Collected Works ofRonald Reagan: A History of Propaganda in Motion Pictures." totally excellent reading.
woofx3, some of the middle-late Dream Songs are among the best. like 191:
"The autumn breeze was light & bright. A small birdflew in the back door and the beagle got it(half-beagle) on the second try.My wife kills fleas and feeds them to the dog,five last night, plus one Rufus snapped herself.This is a house of death
and one of Henry's oldest friends was killed,It came on a friend's radio, this week, whereat Henry wept.All those deaths keep Henry pale & illand unable to sail through the autumn world & weak,a disadvantage of surviving.
The leaves fall, lives fall, every little whileyou can count with stirring love on a new loss& an emptier place.The style is black jade at all seasons, the styleis burning leaves and a shelving of mossover each planted face."
if that last stanze doesn't leave you breathless, then...damn.
― my bach penises and their contrapuntal technique (the table is the table), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 17:27 (sixteen years ago)
i mean, whenever i die, that is going on the funeral program. that last stanza. no question.
obviously, hope not to think about such things for a while, duh.
― my bach penises and their contrapuntal technique (the table is the table), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 17:29 (sixteen years ago)
table, ty for reprinting that dreamsong, it isn't in my copy of berryman's SELECTED POEMS 1938-1968
my fave might be no 69, which begins
Love her he doesn't but the thought he putsinto that young womanwould launch a national prodcutcomplete with TV spots & skywritingoutlets in Bonn & TokyoI mean it
― Ward Fowler, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 17:36 (sixteen years ago)
product
i think ilx posts are some of the best poems ever written
― velko, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 17:43 (sixteen years ago)
i love that one, too!
― my bach penises and their contrapuntal technique (the table is the table), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 17:43 (sixteen years ago)
Yes, thanks table, that was great. Will go back to those later Dream Songs - I tend remember them as falling off badly somewhere after 77, like the form's letting him be sloppy rather than giving him the freedom/structure balance that makes the best of them (and sequences of them) so supple and sharp; the Shakespearisms tended to grate on me after a while too, iirc. But think I might have been reading sloppily. That last stanza is fantastic.
(Man I had better think through some funeral poetry, just in case. Don't want to be leaving it up to random relatives, it will be that "I have only slipped away into the next room" shit.)
― woofwoofwoof, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 18:01 (sixteen years ago)
My favorite death poem: Wallace Stevens' "The Owl in the Sarcophagus."
― post-contrarian meta-challop 2009 (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 18:04 (sixteen years ago)
I dreamt he drove me back to the asylum
I dreamt he drove me back to the asylumStraight after lunch: we stood then at one end,A sort of cafeteria behind, my friendBehind me, nuts in groups about the room;A dumbwaiter with five shelves was waiting (some-thing's missing here) to take me up - I bendAnd lift a quart of milk to hide and tend,Take with me. Everybody is watching, dumb.
I try to put it first among some worm-shot volumes of the N.E.D. I hadOn the top shelf - then somewhere else... slowlyLise comes up in a matron's uniformAnd with a look (I saw once) infinitely sadIn her grey eyes takes it away from me.
― cozwn, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 18:17 (sixteen years ago)
The terrible pathos of this poem convinces you that this was a real dream, not Berryman making one up. An Italian sonnet, effortlessly accommodating a very conversational syntax.
― cozwn, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 18:19 (sixteen years ago)
29 for me
There sat down, once, a thing on Henry's heartsó heavy, if he had a hundred years& more, & weeping, sleepless, in all them timeHenry could not make good.Starts again always in Henry's earsthe little cough somewhere, an odour, a chime.
And there is another thing he has in mindlike a grave Sienese face a thousand yearswould fail to blur the still profiled reproach of. Ghastly,with open eyes, he attends, blind.All the bells say: too late. This is not for tears;thinking.
But never did Henry, as he thought he did,end anyone and hacks her body upand hide the pieces, where they may be found.He knows: he went over everyone, & nobody's missing.Often he reckons, in the dawn, them up.Nobody is ever missing.
― all yoga attacks are fire based (rogermexico.), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 19:34 (sixteen years ago)
All sorts of conflicted about Plath. Loved her at 15, hated by 18, and on through my early 20s.
Ha, I have the same pattern! Except if "on through early 20s" meaning liking again but with a different appreciation.
I forgot how much I loved poetry...I quit interfacing with it six/seven years ago. I'm coming back to it and it's like eating this wonderful meal your aunt used to serve, going back and visiting after years and getting all that force and pleasure back again.
― god bless this -ation (Abbott), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 19:39 (sixteen years ago)
"Interfacing"?
― post-contrarian meta-challop 2009 (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 19:46 (sixteen years ago)
Sure?
― god bless this -ation (Abbott), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 19:47 (sixteen years ago)
thk abbott means reading
― cozwn, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 19:48 (sixteen years ago)
or engaging
interfacing's a word
reading/writing/engaging/thinking baout
― god bless this -ation (Abbott), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 19:48 (sixteen years ago)
Sorry.
― post-contrarian meta-challop 2009 (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 19:50 (sixteen years ago)
I still think you are the bee's knees.
― god bless this -ation (Abbott), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 19:52 (sixteen years ago)
This thread turned into something good, with these Berryman poems.
A stray thought I had while reading it, though: in particular, w/r/t Plath vs Hughes. Why do we end up in these dichotomies so often? I mean, I'm not holding myself above anyone here -- I have no doubt I've fallen into the same trap, and often (*cough* ILM lists) -- but it seems really odd that we have to pit like against like so often. We can love both, right? My stray (or maybe strained would be a better word, lol) thought, actually, was that it reminded me of endless arguments (on ILM and IRL) between Joy Division and New Order, and how I've basically given up trying to compare them in terms of value. If Arial = Closer, then The Hawk in the Rain = Movement and (I don't know) Crow = Technique and it's all good (although Hughes, like NO, has a much larger catalogue, with more room for embarrassing missteps).
― Lostandfound, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 19:54 (sixteen years ago)
In shorter form, why can't we enjoy and engage with something on its own terms, and leave it at that?
Without Ted Hughes we would not have
http://www.mymovie-downloads.com/images/iron_giant.jpg
― god bless this -ation (Abbott), Wednesday, 26 August 2009 19:55 (sixteen years ago)
― Lostandfound, Wednesday, August 26, 2009 2:54 PM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark
There's a lot of snobbery toward the 'known' poets because people want to appear as if they are smarter/wiser/more well-read then the masses. In poetry's case it is especially destructive because readers are so few already.
Countless times I have been turned off by a poet at first read only to have them become a favorite later. Some of that is from poor teachers, mostly its from that ingrained eagerness to be a cynical dick.
― bnw, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 20:03 (sixteen years ago)
Re: Iron Giant: I've never read the original Hughes story, although I love the movie. Was the film faithful or did it deviate a lot, other than obvious details (location, etc)?
xpost
― Lostandfound, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 20:06 (sixteen years ago)
Yeah, I like the "known" poets, but I also love to explore what others have dug up, on threads like these. I seem to remember discovering an ILX thread simply devoted to great poems and I was in an ecstasy of c&p for awhile! I don't know if I'm widely read, but I do know I'm not particularly deeply read if that makes sense.
― Lostandfound, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 20:08 (sixteen years ago)
Oh, I suppose I should say that I love a lot of Plath's work, mostly her poems but The Bell Jar has its moments, and I'm at a loss figuring our how she is "indefensible". Her legacy, maybe, but not her writing.
― Lostandfound, Wednesday, 26 August 2009 20:10 (sixteen years ago)