This journal has received its first inscribed poem. You can also read it in the comments, hither.
Thank you, merc!
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cold discipline for solo travellers
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This journal has received its first inscribed poem. You can also read it in the comments, hither.
Thank you, merc!
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I like reading Terry Eagleton. His turns of phrase, his asides, are like those of a kindly, ironical and ever-so-slightly embittered uncle, the kind of wit to which I fervidly aspired when I was an undergraduate but never had the power or the indulgent audience to achieve.
It is just possible that Porphyria’s lover is a woman, in the sense that you can adopt this hypothesis and still make sense of the work; but nobody would suggest that the lover is a giraffe. This is not just because Victorian writers did not generally go in for poems about bestiality, but because the textual evidence simply would not support it. Giraffes do not wind people’s hair three times around their throat and then strangle them. Their hearts do not swell at the thought that they are worshipped by a woman. Nor do they entertain thoughts about God, aesthetic or otherwise. If someone asked us how we know that giraffes do not spend their time feverishly brooding on metaphysical questions, it would be enough to reply: by looking at what they do. We do not have to get inside their brains to be reasonably sure of this, just as I do not have to get inside your brain to know that when I see you rolling at my feet with your hair on fire emitting strange noises, you are clearly not happy. (How to Read a Poem, p. 105)
In many ways, I think these rhetorical tricks and japes are not to be trusted, since the final appeal here is to something like common sense, that collective hallucination that social scientists spend the better part of their time trying to pick apart. Poets and critics, on the other hand, dwell within the common sense of their times, and Eagleton’s riposte is certainly effective enough to placate that truculent student who wants the lecturer to prove–prove–that a giraffe cannot be a metaphysician-strangler in Browning’s “Porphyria’s Lover”.
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See what a little moonlight can do to you?
The moon is a gondola.
It has stopped rocking.
Yes. It’s stopped now.
And to this high plateau
its stunning influence
on surge and loll of tides
within us should
somehow not go
unremarked
for want of breath
or oxygen.
And if I
to that magic micro-second
instant
involuntary arms reach out
to touch……detain
then surely
it is because you
are so good:
so very good to me.
On a Theme by Hone Taiapa
Tell me poet, what happens to my chips
after I have adzed our ancestors
out of wood?
What happens to your waste-words, poet?
Do they limp to heaven, or go down easy
to Raro-henga?
And what about my chips, when they’re
down—and out? If I put them to fire
do I die with them?
Is that my soul’s spark spiralling; lost
to the cold night air? Agh, let me die
another hundred times: eyeball
to eyeball I share bad breath
with the flared nostrils of the night.
For it’s not me I leave behind: not me.
Only the vanities of people:
their pleasure, their wonder and awe
alone remain.
Bite on this hard, poet: and walk careful.
Fragmented, my soul lies here, there: in
the waste-wood, around.
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Modernism!
21 April, 2008
in commentatrix,in Aotearoa,teaching & learning
My plan of introducing poetry and poetics to my preparatory students in bite-sized chunks (two lots of two weeks) is working very well. Having encountered Wyatt, Shakespeare, Keats and Auden along the way, today we found ourselves alongside Allen Curnow.
[click to continue…]
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