Bob's Blog of Poetry

About Poetry and Stuff

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Location: Southwick, Massachusetts, United States

I've read and written poetry intermittently for over forty years. Had a staged reading of a play on Off Off Broadway. Been published in a few places, both print and online. I was just thinking that maybe I'm spending too much time on the computer, and then I started this blog. I'm nothing if not inconsistent.

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

The new Tilt is up

Rachel Mallino did a great job with the layout of the new Tilt, and the guy who reviewed the books didn't totally suck.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Dueling Poets

I have mixed feelings about QuickMuse as reported in Dinitia Smith's article
On Your Marks, Get Set, Poeticize: Dueling Poets on the Web in the NYT. Two poets were given fifteen minutes to write poems based on a statement by Elisabeth Bishop on the writing of poetry. First, such a prompt invites poetry about poetry, which Paul Muldoon did in an Animal Planet kind of way. Thylias Moss wanted us to know she had a headache and problems finding her favorite shows on cable TV. Ok, whatever.

I have mixed feelings for several reasons. First, I personally don't like to write to a prompt. I want to be inspired, but I don't wait around to be inspired: I read, I discuss, I think. I try to cultivate my mind for maximum inspirational receptivity. But my brain's not a Wal-Mart for poetic ideas.

The other thing I'm not comfortable with is the competitory nature of having two poets square off against each other. Yes, I know that competition exists even in the world of poetry, but such focused jousting doesn't appeal to my nature.

I disagree with Robert Pinsky: "You may not write your best, Pinsky said, "but you should be able to write something that is memorable." I don't have a problem with a poem being written quickly, but fifteen minutes seems a bit short to generate something truly memorable.

On the other side of the spectrum, Gary Snyder, whose poetry I wish didn't bore me as much as it does: "Being spontaneous doesn't interest me nearly as much as getting 'it' right — 'it' being the poem," he said. "I write slowly, come to conclusions slowly, and for better or worse I am just a slow poet." I'd say, perhaps for worse in Gary's case.

One of the features of the site is to have the poem's typing being replayed in actual time. And I thought dressage was boring!

Well, it's another one of those ideas that sounds somewhat intriguing in concept but fails to compel me in its execution.

Monday, May 15, 2006

Gone is a Member of the Community



Stanley Kunitz died yesterday, and so the deathwatch over the hundred-year-old poet can now come to an end. I have a couple books by Kunitz: one of selected poems; and the other translations of Akhmatova. I've enjoyed both, though a single poem doesn't jump out in my memory. Like William Stafford and Robert Lowell, he was a conscientious objector during WWII. Unlike them, he was the target of Anti-Semitism.

He seems to have lived more for poetry than by poetry, refusing tenure at the schools in which he taught; refused because he wanted to be a poet who taught instead of a professor who wrote poetry.

Kunitz said: "I think all artists, and especially poets, are forever in search of a community. It’s a solitary act, and you need a community of like-minded souls to survive and to flourish. So the search for a community is really a lifetime engagement."