Followers

16 October 2013

Walt Whitman, 1819 - 1892


Ah Poverties, Wincings, and Sulky Retreats
Ah poverties, wincings, and sulky retreats,
Ah you foes that in conflict have overcome me,
(For what is my life or any man's life but a conflict with foes,
the old, the incessant war?)
You degredations, you tussle with passions and appetites,
You smarts from dissatisfied friendships, (ah wounds the
sharpest of all!)
You toil of painful and choked articulations, you meannesses,
You shallow tongue-talks at tables, (my tongue the shallowest of
any;)
You broken resolutions, you racking angers, you smother'd
ennuis!
Ah think not you finally triumph, my real self has yet to come
forth,
It shall yet march forth o'ermastering, till all lies beneath me,
It shall yet stand up the soldier of ultimate victory.

William Stafford, 1914 - 1993

Allegiances

It is time for all the heroes to go home
if they have any, time for all of us common ones
to locate ourselves by the real things
we live by.
Far to the north, or indeed in any direction,
strange mountains and creatures have always lurked-
elves, goblins, trolls, and spiders:-we
encounter them in dread and wonder,
But once we have tasted far streams, touched the gold,
found some limit beyond the waterfall,
a season changes, and we come back, changed
but safe, quiet, grateful.
Suppose an insane wind holds all the hills
while strange beliefs whine at the traveler's ears,
we ordinary beings can cling to the earth and love
where we are, sturdy for common things.

09 October 2013

Carl Sandburg (1878 - 1967). Chicago Poems. 1916

READY TO KILL

TEN minutes now I have been looking at this.
I have gone by here before and wondered about it.
This is a bronze memorial of a famous general
Riding horseback with a flag and a sword and a revolver
on him.
I want to smash the whole thing into a pile of junk to be
hauled away to the scrap yard.
I put it straight to you,
After the farmer, the miner, the shop man, the factory
hand, the fireman and the teamster,
Have all been remembered with bronze memorials,
Shaping them on the job of getting all of us
Something to eat and something to wear,
When they stack a few silhouettes
Against the sky
Here in the park,
And show the real huskies that are doing the work of
the world, and feeding people instead of butchering them,
Then maybe I will stand here
And look easy at this general of the army holding a flag
in the air,
And riding like hell on horseback
Ready to kill anybody that gets in his way,
Ready to run the red blood and slush the bowels of men
all over the sweet new grass of the prairie

___________________________________________

Chicago
HOG Butcher for the World,
Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat,
Player with Railroads and the Nation’s Freight Handler;
Stormy, husky, brawling,
City of the Big Shoulders:

They tell me you are wicked and I believe them, for I have seen your painted women under the gas lamps luring the farm boys.
And they tell me you are crooked and I answer: Yes, it is true I have seen the gunman kill and go free to kill again.
And they tell me you are brutal and my reply is: On the faces of women and children I have seen the marks of wanton hunger.
And having answered so I turn once more to those who sneer at this my city, and I give them back the sneer and say to them:
Come and show me another city with lifted head singing so proud to be alive and coarse and strong and cunning. 10
Flinging magnetic curses amid the toil of piling job on job, here is a tall bold slugger set vivid against the little soft cities;
Fierce as a dog with tongue lapping for action, cunning as a savage pitted against the wilderness,
Bareheaded,
Shoveling,
Wrecking,
Planning,
Building, breaking, rebuilding,
Under the smoke, dust all over his mouth, laughing with white teeth,
Under the terrible burden of destiny laughing as a young man laughs,
Laughing even as an ignorant fighter laughs who has never lost a battle,
Bragging and laughing that under his wrist is the pulse. and under his ribs the heart of the people,
Laughing!
Laughing the stormy, husky, brawling laughter of Youth, half-naked, sweating, proud to be Hog Butcher, Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat, Player with Railroads and Freight Handler to the Nation.

Hog Butcher: Seller of pig meet---Freight: goods sent by rail or road--- brawling: street fighting


____________________________

Happiness

I ASKED the professors who teach the meaning of life to tell me what is happiness.
And I went to famous executives who boss the work of thousands of men.
They all shook their heads and gave me a smile as though I was trying to fool with them
And then one Sunday afternoon I wandered out along the Desplaines river
And I saw a crowd of Hungarians under the trees with their women and children and a keg of beer and an accordion.



______________________________


Six years I worked in a knitting mill at a machine
And then I married Jerry, the iceman, for a change.
He weighed 240 pounds, and could hold me,
Who weighed 105 pounds, outward easily with one hand.
He came home drunk and lay on me with the breath of stale
beer
Blowing from him and jumbled talk that didn't mean anything.
I stood it two years and one hot night when I refused him
And he struck his bare fist against my nose so it bled,
I waited till he slept, took a revolver from a bureau drawer,
Placed the end of it to his head and pulled the trigger.
From the stone walls where I am incarcerated for the natural
term
Of life, I proclaim I would do it again.

Ray Bradbury 1920 – 2012



Science fiction writer Ray Bradbury was born in Waukegan, Illinois (1920). When he was 12 years old, a traveling carnival came to town, and Bradbury met a magician named Mr. Electrico, who talked to him about reincarnation and immortality, and those ideas excited Bradbury so much that he withdrew from his friends and devoted himself to his imagination. He said, "I don't know if I believe in previous lives, I'm not sure I can live forever. But that young boy believed in both, and I have let him have his [way]. He has written all my stories and books for me."

One night, Bradbury was out for a walk when a policeman pulled up on the side of the road to ask what he was doing. He said, "I was so irritated the police would bother to ask me what I was doing — when I wasn't doing anything — that I went home and wrote [a] story." That story became a novella called "The Fireman" and eventually grew into his first and best-known novel, Fahrenheit 451 (1953), about a man named Guy Montag who lives in a future world in which books are outlawed and burned wherever they're found. Montag is one of the firemen whose job it is to burn the books. One night he takes a book home that he was supposed to destroy and reads it. The act of reading persuades him to join an underground revolutionary group that is keeping literature alive.
Ray Bradbury said, "I don't try to describe the future. I try to prevent it."

02 October 2013

American Literature at Faco



Course Description:

This course covers a wide range of American prose and poetry including a study of major themes such as transcendentalism, individualism, romanticism, modernism, realism and the American dream. Through a method of practical criticism students will be familiarised with the necessary skills for making a critical analysis of the texts and appraising their representative importance in the corpus of American literature. Additional material will be introduced to the class to elucidate different trends in the American literary tradition. Students will be evaluated on the basis of: 

1) active participation and meaningful contribution to the critical appreciation of the literary texts

2) seminar presentations (groups of up to three students each week)

3) Diaries

Diaries are notebooks for keeping track of the course and will contain commentaries by each student on all the material covered in the course. Diaries will be evaluated on the basis of: 

1) thoroughness of observation and completeness

2) personal touch and creativity

3) Discernment and understanding of the material they cover


* C. Day Lewis ( 1904 – 1972): Once upon a time poetry and science were one, and its name was magic. Magic, for our earliest ancestors, was the most effective way of understanding nature and their fellow-man, and of gaining power over them. It was not till some three centuries ago that science finally broke away from magic: the scientific revolution of seventeenth century withdrew from the "supernatural" as a field of study....

*A.N. Witehead (1861 – 1947) said:

The soul cries aloud for release into change. It suffers the agonies of claustrophobia. The transitions of humour, wit, irreverence, play, sleep, and ---above all---of art are necessary for it. Great art is the arrangement of the environment so as to provide for the soul vivid, but transient, values, human being's require something which absorbs them for a time, something out of the routine which they can stare at."27 " Accordingly, the great art is more than transient refreshment. It is something that adds to the permanent richness of the soul's self-attainment. It justifies itself both by its immediate enjoyment, and also by its discipline of the inmost being." 

*A poem a day keeps psychiatrist away.

*Language logically and scientifically used cannot describe a landscape or a face.

*I.A. Richards (1893 –1979): "Poetry makes us remember how we felt. It operates in a field which is closed to science.

*T.R. Henn (1901-1974)  has spoken of the moral values of art as the " sensitising of the human mind to the living world and its complexities." The final justification of all poetry" he says, is " hat it seeks to express a peculiar fusion of ideas and emotions which are normally on the edge of consciousness, or even beyond it."

*Coleridge (1772 – 1834):  A poem is an organic growth from within outwards. 

*Francis Bacon (1561 – 1626): Poesy serveth and conferreth to magnanimity, morality, and to delectation.  

* And the idea that poetry is a way of penetrating through appearances to the heart of reality.

* Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC): Poetry as mimesis, imitation- recording and recreation of experience.

* William Wordsworth (1770 – 1850): “Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: it takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquility”

*Robert Frost (1874 –1963) : A poem begins in delight and ends in wisdom. – 

Douglas Johnson (1880-1966)


Your World

Your world is as big as you make it
I know, for I used to abide
In the narrowest nest in a corner
My wings pressing close to my side

But I sighted the distant horizon
Where the sky-line encircled the sea
And I throbbed with a burning desire
To travel this immensity.

I battered the cordons around me
And cradled my wings on the breeze
Then soared to the uttermost reaches
with rapture, with power, with ease!

Naoshi Koriyama 1926-


Naoshi Koriyama is a Japanese poet and translator, born in 1926, who works in both Japanese and English.


UNFOLDING BUD

One is amazed
By a water-lily bud
Unfolding
With each passing day,
Taking on a richer color
And new dimensions.

One is not amazed,
At first glance,
By a poem,
Which is tight-closed
As a tiny bud.

Yet one is surprised
To see the poem
Gradually unfolding,
Revealing its rich inner self
As one reads it
Again
And over again.

Edgar Allan Poe 1809 - 1849




The poet and short-story writer Edgar Allan Poe was born in Boston (1809). He was the son of two actors, but both his parents died of tuberculosis when he was just a boy. He was taken in by a wealthy Scotch merchant named John Allan, who gave Edgar Poe his middle name. His foster father sent him to the prestigious University of Virginia, where he was surrounded by the sons of wealthy slave-owning families. He developed a habit of drinking and gambling with the other students, but his foster father didn't approve. He and John Allan had a series of arguments about his behavior and his career choices, and he was finally disowned and thrown out of the house.

He spent the next several years living in poverty, depending on his aunt for a home, supporting himself by writing anything he could, including a how-to guide for seashell collecting. Eventually, he began to contribute poems and journalism to magazines. At the time, magazines were a new literary medium in the United States, and Poe was one of the first writers to make a living writing for magazines. He called himself a "magazinist."

He first made his name writing some of the most brutal book reviews ever published at the time. He was called the "tomahawk man from the South." He described one poem as "an illimitable gilded swill trough," and he said, "[Most] of those who hold high places in our poetical literature are absolute nincompoops." He particularly disliked the work of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and John Greenleaf Whittier.

Poe also began to publish fiction, and he specialized in humorous and satirical stories because that was the style of fiction most in demand. But soon after he married his 14-year-old cousin, Virginia, he learned that she had tuberculosis, just like his parents, and he began to write darker stories. One of his editors complained that his work was growing too grotesque, but Poe replied that the grotesque would sell magazines. And he was right. His work helped launch magazines as the major new venue for literary fiction.

But even though his stories sold magazines, he still didn't make much money. He made about $4 per article and $15 per story, and the magazines were notoriously late with their paychecks. There was no international copyright law at the time, and so his stories were printed without his permission throughout Europe. There were periods when he and his wife lived on bread and molasses, and sold most of their belongings to the pawn shop.

It was under these conditions, suffering from alcoholism, and watching his wife grow slowly worse in health, that he wrote some of the greatest gothic horror stories in English literature, including "The Tell-Tale Heart" and "The Fall of the House of Usher." Near the end of his wife's illness, he published the poem that begins,

"Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary,
Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore —
While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,
As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door."

It became his most famous poem: "The Raven."

*As an individual, I myself feel impelled to fancy a limitless succession of Universes. Each exists, apart and independently, in the bosom of its proper and particular God.

*Beauty of whatever kind, in its supreme development, invariably excites the sensitive soul to tears.

*Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there, wondering, fearing, doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before.

*Experience has shown, and a true philosophy will always show, that a vast, perhaps the larger portion of the truth arises from the seemingly irrelevant.

*I am above the weakness of seeking to establish a sequence of cause and effect, between the disaster and the atrocity.

*I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity.

*I have great faith in fools; self-confidence my friends call it.

*I have no faith in human perfectability. I think that human exertion will have no appreciable effect upon humanity. Man is now only more active - not more happy - nor more wise, than he was 6000 years ago.

*I have, indeed, no abhorrence of danger, except in its absolute effect - in terror.
Edgar Allan Poe

*I wish I could write as mysterious as a cat.

*I would define, in brief, the poetry of words as the rhythmical creation of Beauty.

*If you wish to forget anything on the spot, make a note that this thing is to be remembered.

*In criticism I will be bold, and as sternly, absolutely just with friend and foe. From this purpose nothing shall turn me.

*In one case out of a hundred a point is excessively discussed because it is obscure; in the ninety-nine remaining it is obscure because it is excessively discussed.
Edgar Allan Poe

*It is by no means an irrational fancy that, in a future existence, we shall look upon what we think our present existence, as a dream.
Edgar Allan Poe

*It is the nature of truth in general, as of some ores in particular, to be richest when most superficial.

*It will be found, in fact, that the ingenious are always fanciful, and the truly imaginative never otherwise than analytic.

*Man's real life is happy, chiefly because he is ever expecting that it soon will be so.
Edgar Allan Poe

*Of puns it has been said that those who most dislike them are those who are least able to utter them.

*Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary.

*Poetry is the rhythmical creation of beauty in words.

*Science has not yet taught us if madness is or is not the sublimity of the intelligence.

*Stupidity is a talent for misconception.

*That man is not truly brave who is afraid either to seem or to be, when it suits him, a coward.

*That pleasure which is at once the most pure, the most elevating and the most intense, is derived, I maintain, from the contemplation of the beautiful.

*The boundaries which divide Life from Death are at best shadowy and vague. Who shall say where the one ends, and where the other begins?

*The death of a beautiful woman, is unquestionably the most poetical topic in the world.
Edgar Allan Poe

*The generous Critic fann'd the Poet's fire, And taught the world with reason to admire.

*The ninety and nine are with dreams, content but the hope of the world made new, is the hundredth man who is grimly bent on making those dreams come true.

*The nose of a mob is its imagination. By this, at any time, it can be quietly led.

*The rudiment of verse may, possibly, be found in the spondee.

*The true genius shudders at incompleteness - and usually prefers silence to saying something which is not everything it should be.

*There are few cases in which mere popularity should be considered a proper test of merit; but the case of song-writing is, I think, one of the few.

*There is an eloquence in true enthusiasm.

*There is something in the unselfish and self-sacrificing love of a brute, which goes directly to the heart of him who has had frequent occasion to test the paltry friendship and gossamer fidelity of mere Man.

*They who dream by day are cognizant of many things which escape those who dream only by night.

*Those who dream by day are cognizant of many things that escape those who dream only at night.

*Those who dream by day are cognizant of many things which escape those who dream only by night.

*To vilify a great man is the readiest way in which a little man can himself attain greatness.

*We loved with a love that was more than love.

*Were I called on to define, very briefly, the term Art, I should call it 'the reproduction of what the Senses perceive in Nature through the veil of the soul.' The mere imitation, however accurate, of what is in Nature, entitles no man to the sacred name of 'Artist.'

*With me poetry has not been a purpose, but a passion.

*Words have no power to impress the mind without the exquisite horror of their reality.