Matthew Zapruder (a poet I admire very much) has written a
good piece in the New York Times about the central importance of the literal or
plain spoken-ness when it comes to poetry.
This seems so obvious to me as to not require much discussion,
but such is the state of modern poetry, in the hands of its academic minders,
that it must be rescued from the clutches of over-artfulness and obscurantism. As with most other types of writing, there
is no better place for a poet to start than with the willingness to speak
clearly and directly. Thank you Matthew
for reminding us that poetic truth can and should be plain spoken whenever
possible.
For me, though, there’s an important corollary to Zapruder’s
first principle. Just as a poet must
embrace the value and importance of literal truth, a poet should also recognize
that words alone are limited in their power and capacity to convey some of
life’s deepest and most important meanings.
That is to say, spiritual truth very often leads us swiftly into the
realm of the ineffable – a place where silence more than poetry holds sway. If nothing else this corollary should impose
a little restraint on every poet’s worst tendency, which is to fall in love
with the sonorous possibilities of one’s own voice.
* * * * *
I have more to say about this. But as someone who has come to believe very
much in the sanctity of Emptiness and Nothing, I’ll try to keep my commentary
brief. That’s precisely why I’ve decided
to call my new book (still a work in progress) The Little Book of Nothing.
You can sign up below to subscribe to my email newsletter
where I will be publishing excerpts from this work as it takes shape. The section I’ll be publishing is called The World in Translation and, among other
things, it includes an introduction to Tang Poetry and an explanation of why
Chinese poetics provide such a powerful “new” approach for us to think about
life, language and art, an invaluable alternative to the way we in the west
usually think about these things.
* *
* * *
Dolmens speak of time and words
forgotten
In starlight sweeping across the
heavens
And the lamplight that flickers and dims
Words elide and worlds collide
Photographs curl at their edge
And fall into desuetude
But it’s the endless waves
Of wind water and light
That propagate and proclaim
To petrel and porpoise alike
Not in things themselves
But in the undulation unceasing
There we'll find unity and perpetuity
Neither in what is or is not there
But in the Nothing that remains
* *
* * *
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