This week, I asked my students at Vermont College of Fine Arts to come up with a poem based on these rules: The poem must have two separate voices. One voice will use only keys typed naturally by the left hand. The second voice will use only keys typed naturally by the right hand. Numbers and symbols may be used, too, as can capitals, as long as you stick to the left hand/right hand division for these, too.
I wrote one of these poems once, and I still take it out and tinker with it. It's rough, but here it is as an example.
Conversation for Two Hands
We were grass
We were trees
We were a sea
I’ll moon him & milk him.
I’ll pun. Noun up on him.
I’ll nil him.
We awed fast
faster
we were fated
Jump on him.
John him, junk him.
I’ll null him, unlimn him.
Look, I’m Hun.
Safe safer
sad sadder
Oh....no, I’ll join him.
Pull him in. Uphill him
& hum him. Look, I’m kin.
We were targets
We created a war
Dazed
we traded faces
If you come up with one, I'd love to see it in the Comments field (my comments require moderation, so your comment will have to be approved before it shows up. That's not going to be based on my aesthetic reaction to the poems! Just a precaution against crazies that sometimes post craziness....) These don't have to make total sense (as mine does not) - they just have to tease and intrigue. Think of it as Word Sudoku. Only there's no right answer. Just the joy of the puzzle.
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Poetry Friday today is being hosted by Kate over at The Book Aunt. Head over there to see what other people have posted.
"The miracle is not to fly in the air, nor to walk on the water, but to walk on the earth." (Chinese Proverb)
Friday, August 27, 2010
Friday, August 20, 2010
Poetry Friday: Sierra Nelson - Sine Qua Non
Sierra Nelson in Rome 2010 - Photo by Rebecca Hoogs |
ALMOST BREAKFAST ANYTIME You said, “It makes you wonder,” And I knew just what you meant. The waitress had a shiner. You had one more cigarette. Someone said, “In Wichita,” And the guy in the kitchen laughed. The toast had extra butter. I stacked the half-n-halfs. Plate of pancakes, plate of eggs, Water, coffee, poured in rounds. You had a watch but we’d lost track – “Why don’t we skip town?” But we did nothing of the kind. Cherry. Jelly. Valentine.
When I know I'm going to see new work by Sierra, I'm delighted, because I can't predict what it will be like - her work is always fresh, full of heart but not sentimental, always slightly quirky. And she has energy to spare: She writes for the Kenyon Review blog, she co-founded the performance groups The Typing Explosion and The Vis-a-Vis Society (video link - not to be missed) and she teaches classes in creative writing - if you live in the Seattle area you should not miss opportunities to hear her read or to study with her. Here are links to some upcoming events and classes:
Fall Course at Hugo House:"Exploring the Esoteric: Borrowing from Everything to Write New Work"
Performance at Seattle's Bumbershoot Festival with Vis-a-Vis.
Reading for the PLOP Literary Series. Note from Sierra: "Free delicious pie"!
Oh - one more accomplishment worth mentioning: Sierra is one of the organizers of the Seattle Cephalopod Appreciation Society. Just what it sounds like. They work to increase the appreciation of squid, octopuses, chambered nautiluses and cuttlefish. Their last meeting was on June 13th, but I'm sure they'll have another in the fall - definitely attend. These are occasions for cephalopod-themed celebration - recitations, songs, and (sometimes slightly eerie) octopus movies.
Sierra Lighting a Candle in Rome 2010 - Photo by Rebecca Hoogs |
Friday, August 6, 2010
Poetry Friday - Reaching Back to Byron
Back after a long summer hiatus and much drifting around....photos this time seem to be Lord Death, Lord Sheep, and Lord Byron.....
Trinity - The First Moment of the Atomic Age - Lord Death
Today marks the 65th anniversary of the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. I usually think silence is the only thing that makes sense when contemplating such a thing, or I look for a poem that's directly about the effects of war. But this year, I found something a little more subdued, a little less direct and more complicated. It addresses science and "perfect Knowledge" - at least this one stanza of the poem does - and then it goes such a strange direction that I don't know quite what to make of it. I suppose that "Julia's eyes" are a way of turning away from large mysteries (like how "Man the wonderful" can engage in warfare) and coming back to the pure pleasures of the physical, touchable world? Well, I'm still working at figuring out what it means - and isn't that what a good poem does? Makes us (or lets us) come back to it again and again, looking for more/
Here's Canto 1, Stanza 92 of Byron's Don Juan - I ran across it while reading Richard Holmes' marvelous book, The Age of Wonder: How the Romantic Generation Discoverd the Beauty and Terror of Science (whew! that's quite a title....) I don't often turn to Byron....though I do turn to science...for my poetic inspiration. It's amazing to me how modern this sounds:
He thought about himself, and the whole Earth,
Of Man the wonderful, and of the Stars,
And how the deuce they ever could have birth;
And then he thought of Earthquakes, and of Wars,
How many miles the Moon might have in girth,
Of Air-balloons, and of the many bars
To perfect Knowledge of the boundless Skies;
And then he thought of Donna Julia's eyes.
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Poetry Friday today is being hosted by Laura Shovan over at Author Amok. Drift over there to check out what other people are posting! [And since Laura posted a great close-up (VERY close-up) photo of a giraffe, I'll post my favorite close-up of a sheep. ....oh, shoot, I can't find it in my files. Well, maybe next week.] Here's Lord Byron on a t-shirt, instead.
[Found my sheep - this was taken in Shropshire, England. Will load both pictures.]
Lord Sheep |
Lord Byron |