Thursday, October 9, 2014

I'm gearing up for another session of wrestlemania, which is what my son's soccer teammates have been calling this afternoon's game with the opponents chronicled here. Wish us all luck. We'll need it. In the meantime, I have bread to bake and a batch of honey mushrooms to clean, slice, saute, and freeze. I do love the wild mushrooms of October.

I'm also working, of course--editing a book about Audre Lorde and checking proofs of my own book, The Conversation: Learning to Be a Poet, which is getting closer and closer to publication. I hadn't reread those chapters since last winter, so I was worried that I might have learned to hate them. But you know, they're not bad; they really aren't bad. Here's a bit from chapter 1, which eventually moves on to a study of Shakespeare's sonnet 81.

What’s the Most Important Word? 
On the surface, this is one of the simplest questions a reader can ask about any poem. Words are words: any English reader, however innocent or sophisticated, can identify them, react to them, and talk to each other about them.
            Words are also a poet’s solid artisan materials, which she grasps and throws down and grasps again as she struggles to construct a poem out of silence. In this way, making a poem is very much like building a stone wall. Poets create something out of nothing; they use words to shape what has, till now, been wordless. “How should this grief be properly put into words?” is how Roman poet Horace chose to open his ode “To Virgil.” The way in which he wrestled with that question is the way in which he created the poem.
            So when a reader asks, “What’s the most important word?” she’s starting to think about a poem as a poet thinks about it. She’s also starting to realize that her answer is impermanent. Great art, unlike so much else in our daily lives, requires us to come to terms with our own fluidity. As a reader becomes more familiar with the poem, her choice may change. As she grows older, her choice may change. As she experiences some momentous event in her own life, her choice may change. These shifts are themselves part of the ongoing poetic conversation; in some sense, they become part of the poem itself. A reader with a long, intense relationship with a particular poem might even agree with Adrienne Rich, who wrote in “Images of Godard” that “the moment of change is the only poem.”

1 comment:

Ruth said...

This holds true no matter the age of the reader. When I asked this question of my 4th, 5th, and 6th graders, they too, were beginning to see that words are the very beginning and being of the poem. As1327 young writers themselves, they came to realize that slapping any old world down in order tto be done, didn't allow them to say what they wanted to say.