12.02.2025

words or worlds

The dialectic of poetics: those poets who think poems are made of words and those poets who believe poems are worlds.

12.01.2025

essential experience

Imagination fails the further it gets from experience.

11.30.2025

early risers

The dawn is a term for the early morning used by poets and other people who don’t have to get up.

Oliver Herford

11.29.2025

flash to ash

The poem composed in a flash, and any revision would leave only ash.

11.28.2025

dead dead

He went back to revise the poem not realizing rigor mortis had set in.

11.26.2025

from other tongues

Often it’s non-native speakers who write the most beautiful English sentences.

11.25.2025

root cellar

You haven’t gone down to basement of this poem. There's a root cellar with a door hanging by one hinge waiting to be pushed open.

11.24.2025

worth the effort

Spend the time revising this poem, or just spin up a new one.

11.22.2025

gifting library

Don’t ask me how many books I own—ask how many I’ve read and passed on.

11.20.2025

poet praising poet

I love a good homage poem—a poet praising another poet—knowing how hard it is to write even a few poems that make themselves known and at the same time matter.

11.19.2025

other voice

I am asserting that poetry is irreducible to ideas and system. It is the other voice. Not the word of history or of antihistory but the voice that, in history, always says something else—the same something since the beginning. I don’t know how to define this voice or explain what it is that constitutes this difference, this tone which, though it doesn’t set it altogether apart, makes it unique and distinct. I will say only that it is strangeness and familiarity in person. We need only hear it to recognize it.

—Octavio Paz, “Latin-American Poetry,” Convergences: Essays on Art and Literature (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1987)

11.18.2025

stands aside

The poet stands aside: Someone standing in the shadow of the doorway, waiting for hours for who knows what.

11.16.2025

light fare

He’d tasted some of this, some of that,
but he never made a meal of one book,
nor had he ever feasted for days
at the banquet of an author’s oeuvre.

11.13.2025

is quantum

All translation is quantum.

11.11.2025

reel off

When you realize you can really write, I mean you can reel off line after line effortlessly, that’s when you need to set some limits.

11.10.2025

more than speech

When reading your poetry consider: enunciation, pace, pauses (silence), tone and modulation. Some poets aren’t blessed with pleasing voices, but they can thoughtfully manage their speech patterns to better present their poetry.

11.09.2025

inspired reader

A poet’s function—do not be startled by this remark—is not to experience the poetic state: that is a private affair. His function is to create it in others. The poet is recognized—or at least everyone recognizes his own poet—by the simple fact that he causes his reader to become “inspired.” Positively speaking, inspiration is a graceful attribute with which the reader endows his poet: the reader sees in us the transcendent merits of virtues and graces that develop in him. He seeks and finds in us the wondrous cause of his own wonder.

—Paul ValĂ©ry, “Poetry of Abstract Thought” (1939), Toward the Open Field: Poets on the Art of Poetry, 1800-1950 (Wesleyan U. Press, 2004), edited by Melissa Kwasny

11.08.2025

empty basket

Each time I passed the poet busking in the square he seemed to be getting thinner.

11.06.2025

detail minded to death

A writer is someone who even fusses over the font style of his gravestone.

11.05.2025

workshop is

Workshop: Eight to ten people talking about a poem none of them could’ve written.

11.04.2025

kinds of containers

A poem to me is a container whether it be benign like a water pitcher or dangerous like a pipe bomb.

11.03.2025

theme and form

I always have two things in my head—I always have a theme and the form. The form looks for the theme, the theme looks for the form, and when they come together you’re able to write.

—W.H. Auden, “Obiter Dicta,” W.H. Auden: The Life of a Poet (Michael O’Mara Books Ltd, 1995) by Charles Osborne

11.02.2025

in place of a poem

The mountain of text that took the place of a poem.

[A wry riff on Stevens]

11.01.2025

no homilies here

There is no place for homilies in poetry.

10.31.2025

slow release

A poem as a slow-release potion.

10.30.2025

from mouth to immortality

A poem finds itself most alive in the mouth, but for immortality it must find a place where it’s written down.

10.29.2025

preparing to write

Unless you’re brooding, muttering under your breath, pacing away from your desk, then you are probably not ready to write.

10.27.2025

two halves

Half of the published poems are a half too long.

10.26.2025

abrupt edge

The abrupt edge is actually an ornithological term that I have turned into a metaphor . . . It’s that area of greatest interest and intensity— for birds, of course, but I think also as a metaphor— between the dangerous open space and the bower or covered safe place, let’s say the woods as opposed to an open field—where the danger is, where anything can happen. If [ I ] can find a sense of the experience where there is both danger and safety—and maybe the safety part is the form— then I think I’ve got it right. The danger, of course, would be in the content.

—Stanley Plumly, A Conversation with Maryland Poet Laureate Stanley Plumly by Kathleen Hellen, The Baltimore Review.

10.22.2025

get close

You can’t read a poem nor write a poem, unless you can close read a poem.

10.20.2025

crack of the lash

Poet, crack that first line like a lash.

10.18.2025

driven home

The throughline of the poem ended with a last line that was a stake in the ground.

10.17.2025

the subject is

 The poem is the subject of the poem.

10.16.2025

not that kind of light

 The flaw of thinking that language could ever illuminate one’s life.

10.14.2025

better fit

Many poets don’t realize their poems would be a better fit as prose.

10.13.2025

same same

One felt the poet could go on endlessly in the same register and tone of voice.

10.11.2025

be rid of it

Borges likes to say that he is lazy.

“If some notion comes into my head, and now and then it does, let’s say a notion about a story or about a poem, I do my best to discourage it. But if it keeps on worrying me then I let it have its way with me and I try to write it down in order to be rid of it.”

Jorge Luis Borges, Words and Their Masters (Doubleday, 1974) p41

10.09.2025

shut up

Closing the book a few pages in is the reader’s way of shutting up the author.

10.07.2025

mood matters

Remember that your mood will determine how you read or hear a poem.

10.06.2025

to have no words

There are many ways to praise a poem, including being struck speechless.

10.05.2025

critical blindspots

The kind of conservative critic who wouldn’t have recognized most of the canon had he lived during the times when the works were written.

10.03.2025

talk talk

Try not to talk your way out of a poem. It’s going to take too long.

10.01.2025

whisper or gurgle

Isaiah 29:4. “And thou shalt be brought down, and speak out of the ground, and thy speech shall be low out of the dust, and thy voice shall be, as of one that hath a familiar spirit, out of the ground, and thy speech shall whisper out of the dust.” This describes true poetry. Language suffering the condition of its utterance. Like Pier delle Vigna in Dante, “si della scheggia rotta usciva insieme / parole e sangue, che io lasciai la cima / cadere, e stetti come l’uom che teme” (So from the broken twig spewed out words and blood, so that I let the branch fall, and stood like a man in fear). All spitting and hissing, primal language of pain, original language. Language is a physical medium, needs blood or dust to come true. Poetry must whisper or gurgle.

—Rosanna Warren, The Poet’s Notebook: Excerpts from the notebooks of 26 American poets (Norton, 1995), edited by Stephen Kuusisto, Deborah Tall and David Weiss. [297]

9.30.2025

writer killer

Those dour author photos that look like assassins.

9.29.2025

its own little word

Everything around us is a sub-culture, including poetry.

9.28.2025

almost a sentence

The closer a line of poetry is to a sentence, the more power it has.

9.26.2025

summarized

The poem’s title was a synopsis of the poem.

9.24.2025

dissolving lines

A poem that was dissolving in the mind even before you reached the last line.

9.22.2025

looking out

I’m more interested in poetry that looks out and around and not poetry that looks primarily within.

9.20.2025

viewed through crystal

The surprise in the rhyme is not just a question of sound: Montale is one of the few poets who knows the secret of using rhyme to lower the tone, not to raise it, with unmistakable repercussions on meaning. Here the word ‘miracolo’ (miracle) which closes the second line is attenuated by rhyming with ‘ubriaco’ (drunk), and the whole quatrain seems to stay teetering on the edge, vibrating eerily.

[…]

My reading of “Forse un mattino’ could now be considered to have reached its conclusion. But it has sparked off inside me a series of reflections on visual perception and the appropriation of space. A poem lives on, then, also through its power to emanate hypotheses, digressions, associations of ideas in different areas, or rather to recall and hook on to itself ideas from different sources, organizing them in a mobile network of cross-references and refractions, as though viewed through a crystal.

—Italo Calvino, “Eugenio Montale, ‘Forse un mattino andando’,” Why Read the Classics? (Vintage Books, Random House, 2000).

Montale’s short poem translated by Jonathan Galassi appears in this essay by Huck Gutman.

9.19.2025

what wells up

Too often writing a poem on a whim rather than waiting for the utterance to well up from within.

9.17.2025

woolgathering

Poet, don’t worry over your woolgathering ways—that’s how poems get made.

9.16.2025

do no harm

All poetry workshops should adopt the Hippocratic motto: "to help, or at least, to do no harm," shortened in Latin as, primum non nocere, ‘first, do no harm’.

9.15.2025

welcoming all that follow

Being the first genre, poetry embraces all other genres.

9.14.2025

game player

A parlor-game kind of poetry.

9.12.2025

it works that way

It wasn’t the poem I meant to write, but it was the poem I did write.

9.10.2025

trunk of a tree

When the substance of a composition, trunk of a tree, is by Truth sustained,
Style aids it to branch into leafy boughs and bear fruit.
Indeed, feeling and expression should never fail to correspond,
As each emotional change wears a new complexion on a sensitive face.
Thought that swells with joy bursts into laughter;
When grief is spoken, words reverberate with endless sighs;
No matter if the work be accomplished in one flash on the page,
Or is the result of the most deliberate brush.

—Lu Chi (261- 303), “The Working Process,” Essay on Literature (translated by Shih-Hsiang Chen), Anthology of Chinese Literature: from early times to the fourteenth century (Grove Press, 1965), edited by Cyril Birch. [This essay was written in rhymed-prose and was composed three years before Lu Chi was executed during a power struggle of the Chin court.]

9.07.2025

jail break

Poet, make a genre jail break.

9.06.2025

anything goes

In poetry anything is permitted, which both holds it open to discovery and stirs it into chaos.

9.05.2025

inner workings

As with wrist watches, some poems show their mechanisms while the workings of others are covered.

9.04.2025

lost art

Losing one’s art while striving to be recognized as an artist: Making all the right self-promotional and professional moves, but not attending to the soul-work.

9.02.2025

hats and coats

There is such a thing as Literary Fashion, and prose and verse have been regulated by the same caprice that cuts our coats and cocks our hats.

—Isaac D’Israeli, in the essay “Literary Fashions,” Curiosities of Literature, Vol. II (of 3). Edited, With Memoir And Notes, By His Son, The Earl Of Beaconsfield

9.01.2025

aphotic zone

A poem gradually settling to the bottom of one’s drafts file.

8.30.2025

mistaken evaluation

It’s impossible for most poets to recognize that they’ve written something of little worth.

8.28.2025

thoughtful poem

One of those I-think-this-I-think-that poems.

8.25.2025

alive like that

Model for a poem: A late summer field full of weeds and wildflowers, visited by butterflies and birds.

8.22.2025

is island

A poem is a language island.

8.20.2025

perceptible disappearnances

It is poetry that remarks on the barely perceptible disappearances from our world such as that of the sleeping porch or the root cellar. And poetry that notes the barely perceptible appearances.

[…]

Poets should exceed themselves—when demands on us are slack, we should be anything but. Pressing the demands of the word forward is not only relevant but urgent. If our country does not vigorously cultivate poetry, it is either poetry’s ineluctable time to wither or time to make a promise on its own behalf to put out new shoots and insist on a much bigger pot.

—C.D. Wright, from “Collaborating,” The Essential C.D. Wright (Cooper Canyon, 2025), edited by Forrest Gander and Michael Wiegers, 119-120

8.18.2025

me and me again

Another self-documentarian poet.

8.17.2025

poetic power

There are poets who contained their powers, and poets who were overwhelmed by them.

8.15.2025

face forward

A poet who wore the language mask.

8.14.2025

he was like that

A poet who broke the rules over his knees and then chewed them with his teeth.

8.13.2025

ends here

It’s okay to stomp on a poem to make it stop.

8.12.2025

lonely pleasure

Often have I sighed to measure
By myself a lonely pleasure,
Sighed to think I read a book
Only read, perhaps, by me.

—William Wordsworth, “To the Small Celandine (Common Pilewort); To the Same Flower,” The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, p.338

8.11.2025

then you're in it

Best if the scene is being set without the least sound of the backdrop coming down.