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Aug. 30th, 2005

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Hey since I was looking at names and all thought I'd look for where I were from.

saint verain

So there it is, the only last name I have that's real...we think. Saint Verain. Oddly enough, there is no St. Verain listed as a saint anywhere, just this here town with this here church in the Upper Loire Valley (which is where my whiteness came from). So look ya'll from churchin to heathen in one boat trip across the atlantic...not bad.
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Aug. 1st, 2005

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In order to not be deemed a larouche (some good shite by Koch, who I love, despite all early poems)

What is American About American Poetry?
Kenneth Koch


Ice is like prose; fire is like poetry. But neither melts nor goes out. Ideally (or unideally, some would say) they generally ignore each other's existence.
Rhyme is like a ball that bounces not in the same place but at least in another place where it can bounce.

Poets who write every day also write every year, which is the important thing for poetry.

The poet is the unacknowledged impersonator of the greatest unborn actors of his time.

The Romantic movement left, when it departed, a tremendous gap in poetry which could be filled by criticism and by literary theory but which would be better left alone.

Rome inspired architects and sculptors and painters; the Lake Country inspired poets. Milton inspired Keats. Perugino taught Raphael. Blake gave ideas to Yeats. Sciascia read Chroniques italiennes once every year. Byron learned something from Pope. Even the most unsentimental person is glad to see his home country again.

A tapestry is not like a lot of little poems woven together but like one big poem being taken apart.

Starting off as an Irish poet, one has a temperamental and geographical advantage. Starting off as a French poet, one incites overwhelming curiosity as to what can be done. Starting off as an American poet, one begins to develop a kind of self-consciousness that may quickly lead to genius or to nothing.

Would that he had blotted a thousand! "perfection" is wonderful in poetry but Shakespeare is good enough— one reads on!

There are three Testaments and one is illegible.

The iris is a flower that is part meridian, a ghost come bearing you a villanelle.

What is the matter with having a subject? Wittgenstein says, "There are no subjects in the world; a subject is a limitation of the world." In fact our subject is all around us like a mail-order winter that we carelessly sent in a request for when it seemed it would always be spring.

Eve was the first animal. Therefore she could not have been Eve, and Adam could not have written poetry. Adam could not write poetry unless there was a human Eve. Thousands of years later, there was: Eve de Montmorency. But she didn't encourage the production of poetry. She said I'll kill anyone who writes me a poem. I like life to be real! Inspired all the same, a few poets began writing "free verse" (and it was pretty good) which she was unable to recognize as poetry. Meanwhile, back in the Garden of Eden, Eve woke up. She was a fox no more, but a woman, and a ravishing one! Adam saw her and became terribly excited. Without willing to or wishing to at all (for who could know the consequences?) he fell to one knee, held out his hands and recited: Roses are red, violets are blue. Yes, what's the rest? Eve said. I don't know Adam said. I'm not yet fully a poet. That's as far as I've got. So far, so good, Eve said, and she loved him with a new ardency that night. From their union were born Abel and Cain, who represented two dissenting schools of criticism: Abel, the "inspirational let-yourself-go, just SAY it, let it all hang out, or blossom! Lyrical School"; Cain, the party of more rigorously crafted delight, a sylvan Valery: l'inspiration n'est pour rien— le travail, en poesie, est tout! They fought and killed eachother many times, while Eve brought forth more children in sorrow, and Adam, his body aching, tilled the land.

Once I taught polar bears to write poetry. After class each week (it was once a week) I came home to bed. The work was extremely tiring. The bears tried to maul me and for months refused to write a single word. If refused is the right term to use for creatures who had no idea what I was doing and what I wanted them to do. One day, however, it was in early April, when the snow had begun to melt and the cities were full of bright visions on windowglass, the bears grew quieter and I believed that I had begun to get through to them. One female bear came up to me and placed her left paw on top of my head. Her mouth was open and her very red tongue was hanging out. I realized that she, and the other bears, must be thirsty, so I procured for them several barrels of water. They drank it thirstily and looked up at me from time to time to gratefully but even then they wrote no poems. They never did write a word. Still I don't think this teaching was a waste of time, and I'm planning on continuing it if I have the necessary strength. For hard and exhausting it is to attempt something one knows it is impossible to do— but what if one day those bears actually started to write? I think would all put down our Stefan George and our Yeats and pay attention! What wonders might be disclosed! What dreams of bears!

Reading is done in the immediate past, writing in the immediate future.

The world never tires of bad poetry, and for this reason we have come to this garden, which is in another world.

Apr. 11th, 2005

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My inner european



Your Inner European is French!









Smart and sophisticated.

You have the best of everything - at least, *you* think so.





Well, obviously. I like coffee, poetry, meaningless discussions of philosophy, plus I'm uber keen on art. Viva la crap! This would be as good a place as any to publicize my position on the French, and their stunning idea of Genius.

THE FRENCH IDEA OF GENIUS (as I see it)

Is extremely important, yet extremely simple, let's look at is as a logical syllogism: IF I do not understand this thing I see/hear/read/taste, THEN it follows necessarily that I am not clever enough to understand this thing I see/hear/read/taste. If I am not clever enough to understand it, THEN it must be smarter than I am. IF few people understand it, THEN it must be smarter than most people. IF something is so smart that most people cannot understand it, THEN it must be genius. THEREFORE...IF I do not understand the things I see/hear/read/taste, THEN those things must be GENIUS!!!

This is why the French were so keen on accepting things like Truffles (Which I am convinced are a form of moldy pig booger...tasty yes, but who thought to eat that?!!), Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism, Cubism, Jean Cocteau's Films, Jerry Lewis, Berets, Baudelaire and Rimbaud, Gertrude and Alice, Pet Monkeys, Syphillis as fashion accessory, the Merkin, Pompadors and Perrier (admittedly some of these things are genius, others are merely ridiculous...I leave you to decide which). Mon Dieu! C'est vachement stupide, vraiment!

Apparently in France one can do absurd and disturbing things, and the greater the level of incomprehensibility of those things...the closer one is to pure unadulterated brilliance! Any day now, I'll be receiving a letter from the French government inviting me to be their poster child for the new millinium, and I will spend my days as mascot surrounded by small dogs of various hues, and will roll my naked body in finger paints, then over butcher paper and folk will line up to buy my buttprints, and spout nonsense like the gargoyles of Notre Dame spout water, and wearing only one of those cheese hats from Green Bay (dyed vermillion and covered with bridal cake toppers), and shoes made out of halved pineapple and fat shoelaces, out to the gardens of Versaille, where I will ceremoniously deficate in the self same spot where Marie Antoinette once pinched one off before her beheading, only I will do so surrounded by can can dancers and elvi in flaming jumpsuits who are singing the Aria from Carmen backwards beneath the light of fifty thousand pink glowlights held in the teeth of fifty thousand green parrots who will be released into the air by twelves small girls dressed like madeline from giant wicker sculptures of cell phones...and they will think I am absofuckinlutly genius.

Perrier smells like rotten eggs. Deny it! You can't.