So, with an attempt at a fresh start with Milly, I offer you, forthwith, today's poem:
ShadowsMilly JourdainAlong the winding lane I often walkTouching the trees--letting the grasses slipBetween my fingers. Seeing bluebells shineAmong the fading primroses. BeyondThe open fields sweet with the smell of springLook thro' the gate. And further far awayThe fields and hedges lose themselves in mistAnd yet it's all a dream. Each long day bringsThe perfect images of vanished things.
There are many, many deft and lovely words, rhythms, and images in this brief poem, but the ending is terrible, so altogether it just adds to my confusion--not only about Milly's qualities as a poet but about the definition of poetry, the meaning of poetry--by which I don't mean "What's this poem about?" but "What does it mean to have expressed these feelings?" I don't, at all, want to write poems like this; but at the same time I want the eye that sees this world. Judging the value of a poem is so very confusing, and I am glad, once again, that I have resigned from the Beloit Poetry Journal's editorial board.
6 comments:
You write in such carefully and aristocratically hewn icecast prose-- in Chapter One, and even on your blog.
Clearly you are a genius, immensely gifted. One day you will look back at your experience of life in Maine when you were 40 and I hope I am around to read your words. I have found that looking back from years out, I write from the heart more than the mind. xj
Jenne, I'm speechless . . . though "genius" is a word that everyone in my family would laugh at. I am famously inept at basic skills such as arithmetic and walking through a room without bumping into furniture . . . which I realize, have nothing to do with writing but a fair amount to do with contiguous habitation. As Robert Lowell's father said of his son: "Poets see more in his work than most other people."
Anyway, your blog has also been a pleasure to visit. I've particularly enjoyed your views on animal rearing, which is an interest and a distress that has intersected with my own trajectory. And I'm glad that Maureen has spend so much time on her interview with you. I'm sure that's a great gift to her readers.
I always find it fascinating what people think of poetry and particular poems. I appreciate your post very much for its honesty.
Custis Jensen at the Electric Literature blog wrote a piece this morning about poetry in response to the Gulf Coast oil disaster. He ended the post by stating that "reducing of vastly complex material, social, and political contexts to selected elements figured in compression results in poetry of affirmation, whether it is poetry in response to the Deepwater Horizon disaster or otherwise. Poetry of affirmation which holds very little significance."
Should I not have laughed?
I enjoy your blog a lot. Thank you.
I think you definitely should have laughed!
I rather liked the line breaks.
I agree, Ruth: the break after "beyond" is particularly delicate.
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