All posts by tintinnabulant

Poem City 2023

CCV Poetry Reading with Rick Agran and Linda Quinlan
Wednesday, April 5, 2023
6:30-8 PM  In-Person
Community College of Vermont
660 Elm Street, Montpelier
Please join us for a poetry reading at the Great Room at the CCV site in Montpelier. In addition to well-known poets Linda Quinlan & Rick Agran, staff and students from CCV will be reading. We are excited to once again have a reading at the Montpelier campus and hope you will join us. For more information, contact Samn Stockwell at samnwell(at)hotmail(dot)com.
Live Ekphrastic Poetry and Wordplay at The Front
Thursday, April 20, 2023
6:30 PM  In-Person
The Front
6 Barre Street, Montpelier
Two poets, photographers, and imagemakers (Richard Moore and Rick Agran) lead an evening of "descriptive, inventive, improvisational process" know as ekphrasis. They'll use The Front's Art Show 54 as a jumping off point. Art appreciators obviously share and enjoy collaborative sense-making. We'll explore, transmute, and transmogrify fine art into words and vice-versa. See and hear historical examples of ekphrastic poems. Learn simple techniques. Try and write. Share as willing. Bring writing implements, eyes, ears, and imagination to discover new ways to "enter" an artwork. Good for all poets and artists. Eager rookies encouraged. Masks optional, and bodily autonomy encouraged. Contact radiobonmot(at)gmail(dot)com for more information. 
Context for ekphrasis and elaboration

At its simplest, ekphrasis paints pictures with words. Ekphrasis is a Greek word translating roughly as "a describing process." Writers, artists, and art appreciators enjoy reading and writing ekphrastic poems because they provide new ways of interpreting and sharing fine art. At its best, ekphrasis is collaborative sense-making. Poems inspired by two and three-dimensional art evoke new perspectives for audiences, create new thoughts, feelings, and new ways to "enter" an artwork. Readers are offered new images and lenses. Ekphrastic poems create parallel lives for works of art or characters in them.

As part of The Front Gallery's participation in Poem City 2023, writers and artists will select a compelling (visual) work and seek explore it, describe it, and/or recreate it using (textual) words. In this spirit of collaboration, writers will endeavor to describe, interpret, and free associate. Ready to give it a try? Bring a note or sketch book and a favorite trusty writing implement. Or bring a coffee table art book, an artwork you've wanted to write about, or a beloved postcard.

We'll have a brief introduction and share examples of ekphrastic poems. We'll learn about artistic and poetic vocabulary and ways to see and describe. We'll explore risk-taking and experimentation. They're vital parts of the early stages of creativity. Then we'll attempt ekphrastic writing using the gallery's show for inspiration. In the end we'll gather and share our impressions and reflections on the process, maybe even fledgling poems. This is designed for writers and artists of all skills and ages. Even little kids can explore if they have scribes to write for them. 

See Richard's work 

Charles Simic: Cast of thousands

Juggler of hats and live hand grenades.
Tumbler, contortionist, impersonator,
Living statue, wire walker, escape artist,
Amateur ventriloquist and mind reader
Doing all that without being detected...  
—"One-man Circus"

Charles Simic conjures up this interior cast of characters from a lifetime of crafting poems. Charles SimicThese ten populate a single stanza near the end of his most recent book, “New and Selected Poems: 1962-2012.” They’re a scant handful of the roles he and his characters play in this 50-year compendium. The collection samples broadly from more than 13 of his 20-plus poetry volumes. Including memoirs and translations, Simic has published more than 60 books.

Surveying his cast of thousands, everything and everyone gets a role —from “fate” to a flea. We readers can easily add a few dozen more shoes for Simic to fill or hats to don: insomniac and night wanderer, painter of pastorals with dada elements, relisher of sausage and onions, blind man’s dog lover and black cat walker, drowser and painter, pinner of medals and tailor of suits, the butchered and the butcherer, and teacher of now-gray-haired children (of which I am one).

Simic’s love of the imagists, surrealists, philosophers and underdogs permeates this half-century’s work. He’s a lifelong subscriber to William Carlos Williams’ doctrine: “No ideas but in things.” It’s an interesting prescription for a doctor, and Simic is a practicing metaphysician. Never have nouns been so alive, nor have so many memories been resurrected from the dead.

Simic casts poems with lickers of lollipops and ladies, a “king of birdshit,” swimmers and skinny-dippers, a sailing ship “pinned by one golden pin of sunlight.” A poet becomes as a momentary obstacle to a pond-bound toad. A dead flea who’s once bitten the ass of Abigail is now enfolded into the fallow pages of a used book.

As a reader, this journey takes a certain agility. Finding tests of transformation and reinvention, one trudges on as a dopey apostle of fate and futility. As a campaigner, we’ll witness two continents and four wars’ worth of human folly. Naturalist and transcendentalist guides bring us a talkative weed, crumb-snatching ants and a spider leaving little red footprints on our palms. To relish this volume enlists one as a devotee of a poet who sees as much with eyes closed as opened.

In his “Form and Theory of Poetry” classes at the University of New Hampshire, Simic recommended the benefits of reading an author’s work chronologically, volume by volume. Close reading over a creative continuum serves as an apprenticeship of sorts. It’s the way many of his students read Williams, Wallace Stevens, Sylvia Plath, or Robert Frost (just for starters…). “New and Selected Poems: 1962-2012” reads this way. Themes and concerns toss and turn as we philosophize along. We’re rewarded regular respites of rustling leaves and lakeside, a solitude of nappy dreaming. These interludes soothe recurrent troubled landscapes of war-torn Belgrade that set Simic’s family afloat in the 1940s. Simic was born and raised in an embattled place, an occupied territory and that also reverberates over this work. The great dictators were—his mom joked wryly—their tour guides and war an idiotic “orphan factory.”

Simic shared, in a 2004 interview with the Paris Review’s Mark Ford, “Naturally, I still have my obsessions, my bad habits, my blind spots. Like all poets who have written this long, I repeat myself.” More generously, I’d say there are major and minor variations on themes. Simic improvises and riffs, and reworks obsessive images. It’s enjoyable to see things revisited and reinterpreted after several decades.

It’s also interesting to see the short terse work in his early career give way to longer sectioned poems and then shrink again a few decades later. It offers a rewarding variety. His explorations in the long poem, “White,” published in 1972, gain nuance and complication when revisited in “The Invisible,” about 300 pages and 38 years later in 2010. These two poems are less conscious companions and more like inquisitive cousins across time and space.

Sand-smoothed ceramic doll-heads reward the wanderer at the water’s edge and their discovery punctuates several decades of beach-going. Keys—lost, rusty, singular, shiny, well-worn—fill the pockets and cigar boxes where we keep our collective personal histories. Signature early poems like “Knife,” “Fork,” and “Spoon” chronicled separately in the 1970s find themselves a trio in 2012. The spoon beside the bowl of the starved is counterposed years later by one licked clean of its honey.

If one knows the Simic canon, there are things to miss in “collected” work. The early and crystalline poems in “Charon’s Cosmology,” “Return to a Place Lit By a Glass of Milk,” “Classic Ballroom Dances” and “Austerities” aren’t differentiated in this edition’s timeline. These single collections blur now, but were full of quirky experiments and bold leaps. Poems kept company and were interesting neighbors.

Revisiting Simic’s prose poems, the Pulitzer-winning “The World Doesn’t End” is an unhappy reunion for which I blame not Simic, but his publisher’s typographical inexactitude. The poem’s original typesetting was episodic. Each poem, each page, had its own world and white space. Like the negative space around a three-dimensional art work, this white space was place to land, savor and reflect before moving to the next poem place. These poems struggle to hold their tautness in excerpted form. The prose poems appear in multiples upon a single page and therefore act, typographically, more like stanzas than chapters or episodes. As a reader, all the anticipatory joy of page-turning disperses. The dilution could easily be remedied using the volume’s nine blank pages at the end. But this is minor nay-saying.

A book of this scope needs a contextual forward and his peers and poetry co-conspirators would fall over themselves to write one, one can be assured. We could easily celebrate this accomplishment of 50 years endurance. But therein lies an interesting irony; without definers, Simic’s poems end up applying for the job.

Scrawly self-portraiture and poetic personas emerge in “New and Selected Poems: 1962-2012” every decade or so. Tongue-in-cheek self-definition ranges from a bestiary of his writing hand to “Charles Simic,” a poem that renders him as the double-entendred “sentence.” A little tangible self-scolding in one’s shaving mirror gets juxtaposed with our author proclaiming an intangible “secret identity” and escaping out the open window. Simic sees himself in the mirror of a city graffito: “crazy charlie” and follows up with poem “I’m Charles” in which he’s actually graffitied upon.

The collection’s poems of the last decade explore transitions. Simic retired after 35 years at UNH and the deaths of colleagues with whom he’d taught most his adult life. He served as U.S. Poet Laureate almost immediately thereupon. His children left the country for the city, and he’s become a grandparent. His poem “The Toad” revels more in the staying put than traveling:

"It'll be a while before my friends 
See me in the city…
I'm staying put in the country, 
Rising early, 
Listening to the birds 
Greet the light...
God never made a day as beautiful as today, 
A neighbor was saying. 
I sat in the shade after she left 
Mulling that one over, 
When a toad hopped out of the grass 
And, finding me harmless, 
Hopped over my foot on his way to the pond."

Optimistically, we could see another decade or decade and half’s poems added to this already impressive body of work. We’re lucky, as a nation, Simic found harbor in the U.S. and even luckier, as a state, to have him as a resident. His life in the New Hampshire countryside balances his city life as a youngster and makes him an interesting blend of barefoot metropolitan and sophisticated hayseed. He has many faces still yet to try on.

Generally, Charles Simic’s collections culminate with a hopeful gesture which is pleasing.  In “New and Selected Poems: 1962-2012,” his new life is made manifest as a unnoticed ribbon of light under a door he’s not seen until recently. Although it’s the dream door of an insomniac, I feel relatively certain he’ll find the correct key tucked away in a pocket or in a dimestore cigar box.

— Rick Agran

Originally posted in The Wire

Charles Simic: Cast of thousands

Sharon Olds: ‘Our family, naked, into art…’

For poet Sharon Olds, liberty and responsibility are a blessing and jinx. They’re a tightrope walk in New York City, or in New Hampshire, a log across the brook where one does a little windmilling in the middle. Life wouldn’t be the joyous hell it is without testing one’s feet, without a little exploratory swing and sway. Olds’ new collection of poems, “Stag’s Leap” (Alfred A. Knopf, 2013), performs just such a literary transit. At 71, she’s publishing work she lived through years ago. Clearly she’s reached the other side, wiser and happier. We’re lucky to have her join us in rural New Hampshire when she’s not teaching in NYC.

Winner of the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for poetry and the international T.S. Eliot Prize for poetry, Olds’ double play is impressive. “Stag’s Leap,” her twelfth book, chronicles the dissolution of a 30-year marriage as her doctor husband leaves her for a colleague with whom he’s fallen in love. Olds’ dedicated readers will already know the cast of characters as she’s constructed them for us over the last several decades.

The poems are accessible to any broken-hearted person who, however blinded, has learned to re-see. There are the first several years of leave-taking, time spent in bewilderment and wakening, and one or two spent sorting, reflecting, grieving and angering. The culmination metamorphoses some time distant, when the book’s reflection, grace and gallantry, are hard-won.

Olds and her partner have two children (a third, miscarried 30 years ago, is also eulogized here). The family has been fodder for decades of personal and explicit poems. In this case, she acquiesced to her offspring’s request for a moratorium on publishing this subject matter. The book comes 15 years after the split. My guess is that this has saved us from some of the rawness of the experience. The time Olds has taken to write, reflect, revise, and reawaken serves all of us well. Rookie confessionalists often can’t distinguish venting from poetry. Olds’ artfulness is beyond compare. Where the rookie besmirches the audience, Olds the artist explores the intersection of personal and universal and finds their paradoxical unities.

How else might one craft an angry and at turns hilarious language-play like the nursery rhymish “Left-wife Goose.” Unable to keep her husband in real life, Olds ensconces him in the “pumpkin shell” of a poem like vengeance upon an unfaithful Peter, Peter:

“Hoddley, Poddley Puddles and Fogs,
Cats are to Marry Poodle Dogs;
Cats in Blue Jackets and Dogs in Red Hats,
What Will Become of the Mice and the Rats?
Had a trust fund, had a thief in,
Had a husband, could not keep him.”

The book has been described by critics and reviewers as a divorce journey. I’d say that’s a bit simplistic. This is not Gluck’s “Wild Iris” nor Didion’s “Year of Magical Thinking.” The complexity of Olds’ work has historical and artistic precedent in confessional poetry, but Olds for years, when questioned, has refused to speak about her work’s “trueness.” Her desire is to have the poetry discussed on its artistic merits. Her amazing eye for detail, ear for the music of language, and feel for the workings of the human psyche form the tripartite that makes her an award-winning poet, not simply her ability to “get through it.” Her poetic process is diligent and artful.

T.S. Eliot Prize contest judge and British Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy shared with The Guardian: “This was the book of her career. There is a grace and chivalry in her grief that marks her out as being a world-class poet…. Her journey from grief to healing is so beautifully executed.” I agree the poems are beautifully executed, but find the declarative “book of her career” comment problematic. This collection’s poems appear along Olds’ well-traveled continuum of sense-making and are not a final destination or “arrival.”

Since her early volumes, Olds has learned the world through authoring it. Human power dynamics, and the complexity of the relationships that develop because of them, are her life’s work as an artist and writer. Her explicit storytelling has been called both pornographic and liberatory. This volume is marked by Olds’ willingness to share with readers that her work is autobiographical. The suffering of a child of abusive parents can now accompany the solace and healing found in her marriage and motherhood. Their interstices and complications, long intuited by readers, now have the poet’s full acknowledgement for the first time. Olds’ writing “embraces contraries,” to borrow a phrase from writer Peter Elbow. That’s the joy of its complications and interrogations, as well as the discomfort for those whose desire is for something more fundamental and simplistic.

Many of these poems first appeared in ones and twos in journals like Poetry, The New Yorker, Tri-Quarterly, Slate, The Atlantic. “Stag’s Leap” concentrates the body of work and creates a prolonged narrative, an elaborated story arc, and a complete learning cycle.

As her family relationships are redefined by the parting of ways, the inevitable time passed means that everyone has grown into their next chapters. And in fact, her poetry career had already parted her in some ways from her ex, Olds begins to acknowledge. She’s in love with language and he is a man of fewer and fewer words. He realizes he loves a fellow doctor, someone more like him, and must go. As a poet, she’s been more capable of inventing and romanticizing. A number of the poems realize the drawbacks of this “creative power” to anesthetize oneself rather than to awaken—and, conversely, to pain her partner.

Much of her life has been spent teasing out her ex’s voice and expression. Paradoxically, she discovers the lifelong voice and avocation she found in her writing was a gift from him. The poem “The Easel” is written in the book’s sorting and angering phase. As a young couple, he often painted her portrait, and this, she realizes now, showed her how to render their family as art.

Olds lights a bonfire to dispense with her ex’s “left-behind craft” and to rid herself of the vestiges of his abandoned artistic pursuit. She long ago took the torch from him, kindling a symbolic fire. She reflects as his easel burns that:

“…I am burning his left-behind craft
he who was the first to turn
our family, naked, into art.
What if someone told me, thirty
years ago: If you give up, now,
wanting to be an artist, he might
love you all of your life − what would I
have said? I didn’t even have an art,
It would come from our family’s life −
what could I have said: nothing will stop me.”

Olds, in the end, becomes both the artist and the healer too, using her voice and encouraging the voices of others as not only a poet, but a writing teacher and a role model for other poets. As a survivor, she’s the bridge and the crosser. It’s a perverse pleasure to watch her wobble and a delight to watch her right herself.

Sharon Olds will sign books and read her poems for a neighborhood poetry event on Thursday, June 13 at 7 p.m., at Scenic Theatre, 6 Depot St., Pittsfield (15 minutes north of Northwood on Route 107), 603-435-8852. An $8 donation is suggested.

− Rick Agran

Original Post

Generic Theater's "Largo Desolato" at Players' Ring with Roland Goodbody as Professor Leopold Nettles and Helen Brock as Lucy

Composing character: Generic Theater revisits Havel’s ‘Largo Desolato’ at The Players’ Ring

Generic Theater's "Largo Desolato" at Players' Ring with Roland Goodbody as Professor Leopold Nettles and Helen Brock as Lucy
Roland Goodbody plays Professor Leopold Nettles. Helen Brock plays his current love interest, Lucy.

When a composer says to play “largo desolato,” in terms of musical notation, he or she directs symphony musicians to perform “big and lonely.” Translate that into Czech playwright Václav Havel’s native tongue and “largo desolato” means “the general void.” Generic Theater’s performance of “Largo Desolato” at The Players’ Ring in Portsmouth offers both these notions for examination. Generic Theater resurrects their theatrical exploration of “captivity,” both actual and imagined, for the next few weeks.

Generic Theater produced “Largo Desolato” 16 years ago at the McDonough Street Studio. It was just a few years after the USSR’s breakup liberated Czechoslovakia and brought Havel onto a world stage in a leadership role. It is oddly circular, observed actor Roland Goodbody, to “be mounting the production again with the similar backdrop of Egypt, Tunisia, Bahrain and perhaps Libya so present in recent political consciousness.”

In an interview at UNH’s Dimond Library, where Goodbody works in Special Collections, he shared what it’s been like to revisit the role of Leopold Nettles he played over a decade and half ago.

“Of course I’m 16 years older and so I have a more informed perspective and a more complicated interpretation. I appreciate Havel more as a playwright than I did before. I see Havel’s sophistication in a way I didn’t. He’s taken a phenomenological approach, looking at reality as both an objective state and perceived experience,” Goodbody said.

The play explores a small slice of history as Havel examines the double-edged sword of leadership. Philosopher/writer Leopold Nettles (like Havel) is thrust into a powerful position as dreamer and spokesperson for an unnamed resistance movement. He’s become a lone eloquent voice for a diverse people. Half the “people” want him to speak up, while their counter forces want him to renounce what he’s said in the past and then shut up. Nettles, in a claustrophobic cage of an apartment, becomes isolated to the point of despair. He appears to be under house arrest, but the possibility arises that he’s chosen his own punishing limbo.

“Philosophically, the play explores personal agency and questions what responsibility being a leader raises,” Goodbody said. “Nettles is a man who sparks a revolution and then doesn’t want to lead it as much as others want him to.”

The production, directed by Peggi McCarthy with set design by Cary Wendell, works in the tradition of “the theatre of the absurd.” There is much repetition of lines, with minute variations from multiple characters. There’s circularity of conversation and action, and, said Goodbody, “People behaving oddly, with an almost clowning oddness, which might capture the oddness of the culture at the time.”

Nettles is surrounded by this oddness. There are three lovers: Suzana, an ex played chillingly by Susan Turner; Lucy, a present girlfriend played both humorously and despairingly by Helen Brock; and a potential future lover, Marguerite, played fawningly and playfully by Kate Quisumbing.

Nettles also has two comrades: Edward (Mike Pomp) who questions and seemingly cuckolds him, and Bertram (Alan Huisman) who berates him in a most withering display. A pair of working class stiffs, both named Sidney (Steve Ericson and Richard Di Mario), inject smoking, drinking, off-kilter conversations and discomfort while bringing Nettles his writing supplies. The ensemble is filled out by trench-coated men and chaps (Cary Wendell, Betsy Kimball, and Peter Michaud) who appear to mock, menace, and threaten, and are the coiled force of which to be afraid.

Havel wrote this semi-autobiographical play within a year of his prison release in 1984. It’s a creative and cathartic play for Havel, after hard labor and house arrest. Imagine a smart, mouthy, chain-smoking Czechoslovakian philosopher in a western bloc communist country going from non-partisan, non-political guy to president of an independent democratic country in about 20 years. That’s Havel’s real trajectory, a life which unfurled at a breakneck pace. Raised in communist Prague, he went from affluent kid, to chemistry factory worker, to phenomenologist philosopher, to thwarted (then banned, then jailed dissident) playwright. He became an outspoken cultural critic and sought to reclaim fundamental human rights guaranteed to citizens through their Constitution, yet denied by the communist leadership.

The dialogue is at once deeply unnerving and absurdly funny: Edward: “Well, perhaps there’s something wrong with you.” Leopold: “I’m afraid not.” Edward: “Well that’s something to be thankful for, isn’t it?” Leopold: “I’d rather be ill than be well like this.”

Goodbody thinks the play “is more about philosophy than politics. It’s really a close look at one person’s experience. And even if he’s an ass, we feel some sympathy. Leopold is so uncertain, and has no sense of destiny.” Yet his friends, lovers, and some countrymen rally around him. “As an actor I find this intriguing and a bit bemusing. Ninety-nine percent of the time, I’m onstage and it’s easy—easier than coming and going. I don’t have to think about all those between parts when I’m on, I just wait until someone asks me a question and I’m on to Leopold’s circularity again: his pills, inebriation, constipation, and disorientation in times.”

The play ends where it begins, with Leopold’s furtive glances out the peephole and surreptitious listening as history gets in line to repeat itself.

— Rick Agran

“Largo Desolato” runs through April 17 at The Players’ Ring, 105 Marcy St., Portsmouth, 603-436-8123. Show times are Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 4 p.m. Tickets are $14 for the general public or $12 for seniors and students ($2 discount for members).

Original Post