Tuesday, April 30, 2013

End of the Semester Expectations

We will meet at my house for our final exam session at 1:30 on May 2nd, a Thursday. 

9800 Seymour Street
Houghton

Directions:
On foot, cross the little bridge behind Lambein.
When you reach Luckey Road at the top of the incline, turn right.
The second house on the right, the red house, is mine.

We will be interacting with and listening to two "local" poets, Jack Leax and Linda Mills-Woolsey. Please be familiar with their work in terms of the handout I will give in class.  Be ready to engage them in discussion.

Professor Emeritus Jack Leax has written many books in many forms.  He taught at Houghton College for 40 years before his retirement. He continues to practice his craft.  Dr. Linda Mills-Woolsey is Dean of our institution.  She is both a 19th Century scholar and a practicing poet.

As to the poems required for our course:

Please work up until the day of our final exam period. Post all the poems/revisions you would like to have considered for the poetry part of your grade. Your last post should begin with the titles of the ten poems that you have chosen to represent your best work.


Thursday, April 11, 2013

Art Begats Poems: More Baby Poems

Some time Thursday or Friday or Saturday, spend an hour in the Ortlip Gallery looking at the work in the Juried Student Art Show.

My suggestion is that you make an initial pass or tour of the work on display, noting the pieces that catch your eye or that arouse interest or curiosity. Go back to the several pieces that you made notes about and look at those few until you find one that triggers something, that starts a chain of associations, or that gives you a poetic line or that creates a poem idea. 

 Then write a poem from that starting point.

When you post this poem (class time Tuesday), you will  want to give credit to the artist/work in some way either with identifiers in the poem itself, or in the title of your poem, or in an italicized "dedication" line under the title (after Stud Dent's painting, Wreckless Love).

The poem should be long enough to do something with the inspiration (let's arbitrarily say a minimum of 6 lines), and it can take any form you choose.  It does not have work in concert with the poem itself; all it needs is a clear jumping off point.

When the Senior Art Show is put up and open, we can repeat this assignment.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

20 February 2013


Assignment for 27 February

For Tuesday, write what we will call an “American Sonnet” – a 14 line poem with lines of 10 syllables.  These lines do not need to follow a rhyme scheme; but if any of the 14 line-ending words do rhyme, all the lines need to follow a rhyme scheme.  That is, rhymes should be intentional if you choose to use them, not random. The poem should have two stanzas: the first stanza should consist of 8 lines and the second should consist of 6 lines.  Line 9 needs to begin with a shift away from the direction of the first stanza. In other words, we will think of line 9 as the “but” line.

Variations on this basic pattern, which is already a variation on stricter traditional sonnet forms, are permitted within reason. The issue is intention rather than randomness.  We are not engaged in the organic determination of form that characterizes “free” verse. Rather, we are attempting to work within a formal structure right from the very beginning.

Suggestion: You may well want to pick your subject before you head into the writing of your sonnet in order to “orchestrate” the subject with regard to the turn or “but” in line 9.
Examples of sonnets from our text include:

Billy Collins          77 & 43
Bill Shakes           274-79
E.B.Browning     47
P.B.Shelley         280
Bill Words            357
John Donne        100
Bob Frost             130-131
Bob Hayden       147
Gerry Man Hop 161-162
John Keats          179-180 & 182
Claude McKay   222
Edna St. Vincdent  Millay              223-224
John Milton        225
Sir Philip S            285
Eddie Spenser   288
Sir Tom Wyatt    361
W.B.Yeats           370

Then to round out the alphabet we have this by J. A. Zoller from Living on the Flood Plain

Standing Water

Where water lies on low ground, grass dies.
Its smooth surface, that mirrored sky, slowly clouds.
Water striders haunt its face, mosquito larvae
hang mysteriously below the blue reflection,
a mud turned-dirt-ring trails its slow recession.
Where water finds rest, decay begins.

Who is to say the life that attends its dying –
Frogs, mosquitos, water bugs, algae, mud life –
is  less necessary, less worthy, less living?

Are we to say one but not the other?
– the falling, streaming, soaking, filling but not
the wandering, eroding, this hanging around?

And do we not judge, as it drives us away,
that earthy, once welcoming air turned stink?


Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Poem Prompts for Middle Semester



Several On-going Poetry Writing Assignment
12 February    
                                                                                                         
Directions:  Over the course of the next few weeks, try writing poems from the following descriptions.

Occasional poems
The occasional poem may just be poems that are inspired from time to time by something unusual or not common (the occasion). They may also be very intentional as with poems written for significant occasions like weddings or ordinations.  They may also be poems to be read on regular occasions, as with poems written for annual holy days or to be read within the regular worship context.

Begin by making a list of “occasions” for which a poem would offer some kind of focus, celebration, or significant observance. 

Then write a poem for those occasions, keeping in mind that the venue may carry its own limitations.

E.g., See "Notes for His High Calling" below.

E.g., "Romance of Air and Bones" may well be a Valentine's Day poem.  It is in my book Living on the Flood Plain.  I wrote it for my wife.




Romance of Air and Bones



Along the dead-end street
you and I walk hand in hand,

listening to the soft snow
drifting through this gray afternoon,

watching flakes light upon
our dark winter clothes.

When you speak,
dark-limbed trees lean in,

the sky brightens.
When you speak, your words

appear in the cold air,
land upon my ears and lashes,

white grows transparent
– your day my day float,

dance in air weightless as snow,
lightened by love and talk

– those ephemeral white crystals,
commonplace of true companions.


 
List poems
A list poem is simply that: it is a list. The list is usually of words that are related in some discernible and interesting way. In a list poem one make rhythm and cadence simply from sound rather than from sound and meaning. A way of talking about a list poem is that it attempts to do for the poetic form what the collage does as a kind of art. One is, in this way, interested in impressions arising from the relationship created by items in the list rather than from linear connections that characterize syntax.

E.g., See "Cairns" below. The "list" begin in line 8. "Cairns" can also serve as an "object" poem, with various stone references being the objects in question.


 
Object poems
An object poem attempts either to collect objects the way one collects items in a list or to begin with an object, nearly always named directly at some point, that is then treated imaginatively.

E.g., the following is one part of a three part poem I wrote for my youngest son's wedding:

 Cairns    1


Consider the hour when fog lies below first sun.
We find ourselves upon a path, familiar
yet new as morning is new.  Patterned
on Creation itself, each morning a new promise,

each calls us to look, to listen. To treasure it.

Fog lingers.  Light opens a way.  We step forward
trusting light, the path, the living of each step –
our journeys directed by the silent witness of stones.
Stones of our generations. Stones of struggle, of life.

Stone of fences, walls, roadways, of foundations and altars.

Gathered stone. Discarded and scattered, rubble of ice age
picked cleared hauled chosen, one stone worked upon another
boundary stones, memory stones, stonework beside cleared fields.
This stone, faithfulness.  That one, endurance.  Support.  Love.

Paving stones, companion stones, milestones.  Cairns.

Quarried stone.  Granite, marble. Pillar.  Foundation stones
laid and fitted. Cornerstone, stone of reference and alignment.
Witness of design.  Direction.  Witness of upheaval and weather. 
Whetstone, each in turn, for honing tools, talents, character.

Keystone.  Conjoining love and faith, the arch of marriage.

Precious stones, gold silver emerald.  A woman chosen.
A man refined. A marriage of partners, of character hewn by God.
Adorn your neck with love. Bind it to your wrist, your waist.
Etch faithfulness on the tablet of your hearts.

Trust.  Wisdom.  Ledge and bedrock.  Lodestone. Living stones.


1  Rough stones piled as memorials or landmarks



Allusion poems
Nearly all poems that fit the great traditions contain or employ allusions of one sort or another.  The allusions may be direct or implied.  They may be triggered from borrowed language, borrowed forms, borrowed ideas after the manner of “sampling” common in some forms of popular music today; or they may be triggered from less direct mimicking of sounds, phrasing, images, ideas, or references.

E.g., allusions in the following poem are fairly obviously taken from what we call the beatitudes. This poem is also a tribute to a member of the Houghton community; a tribute poem is usually a particular form of "occasion" poem.



Notes for This High Calling
                        a tribute to William T. Allen at fourscore
                                Matthew 5:14-16

Let us say:
Blessed are the common places,
                for they shall sustain us.
Blessed are the humble,
                for they shall guide our steps.
Blessed are the reticent, Blessed the quiet,
                for they shall point us to God,
                they shall open our ears.

On a curb at a village cross-
                roads late at night, passing
                among shadows, a trash bin
Painted after Van Gogh, redeemed
                by a copier, nameless artist,
                who turns our thoughts upward
                                in great darkness to starry songs of light,
Called to bear witness in this troubled world.
                We travel homeward through night –
                our journeys, somehow, enlightened.

Let us say:
Blessed are the un-likely,
                for they shall be called by name.
Blessed are the deep coals,
                for they shall be fanned to flame.
Blessed are the willing, Blessed the servant hearts,
                for their hands shall be calloused,
                they shall be given, abundantly.

Joy of spring dawning
                sun dazzling, bush burning,
                forsythia in bloom!
Joyously red at its heart
                all but hidden in aureolin, 
                a cardinal declaims
                                his song, pulsing, a many noted aria.
Called to witness, unwitting wonderers,
                we stand, arrested, air vibrant –
                our very souls aflame.

Let us say:
Blessed are the uncommon places,
                for they shall breathe life.
Blessed are the restless minds,
                for they are heir to the God of Creation.
Blessed is the deep welling, Blessed the music maker,
                who has brought us nearer to God
                and bids us listen.  Children, listen.


Landscape portraits

Keeping with our progression from paragraph to poem, description to poem, and image to poem, we want to vary our technique just a little to produce a poem that resembles a water color rather than an oil painting.

               Let’s begin by examining landscape photographs, thinking in particular of what we want inside the frame.
To do this examine the landscape photographs in the hall ways of the 2nd and 3rd floors of the Ch C. [What is “in” the picture?  What lies beyond the boundaries?]
Then go to several locations on campus to find and “frame” a landscape.  It may have human things in it but they must not be the only or even the central element of the landscape you have framed. Sketch it quickly (with words, probably) on paper.  One should involve one fairly close frame, one a distant frame, and one somewhere in between.
 This task is similar to the description task you were given before.  What is different primarily is the presence of a frame (a boundary or limitation to the descriptive subject itself) and a faster process (you are to "sketch" rather than "study" what is in the frame).
From these sketches, write a poem whose intention is to render the landscape.  You are interested in precision, economy, and telling details. What the poems mean ought to be descriptive. The poems themselves ought to be spare, economical, descriptively dynamic but not narrative.