wince to remember. It was a poem Iâd written in college. My creative writing teacher, a taciturn but fair-minded man, wrote, âIâm a bit baffled by this. To be frank, itâs boring.â
Well, yes, it was boring. But I was undeterred, and I sent it to fifteen places, and
Bird Effort
published it, and after that I wrote much shorter poems.
Iâve written three more poems about clouds since then. I canât get enough of them. I am drawn to describe them even though I know itâs futile. Theyâre different every day. Debussy liked clouds. The first movement of his
Nocturnes
is called âNuages.â He also liked sunken cathedrals. He died when he was fifty-five.
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I âM PARKED by the salt pile now. It sits here all summer, waiting for winter, when it will be dribbled out onto the roads and sometimes poison the roots of the trees.
All systems go. Boink. Iâm ready. Thanks. Good.
Greetings, this is Chowderâs Poetry Slurp, and Iâm here to welcome you to another show in which we talk about the world of freelance hydroponics. Iâm Paul Chowder, your harbormaster, confidant, and co-conspirator. And I hope that you will sit back and close your eyes and just let the poetry wash over you. Just let it pass over you in a lethal tide of poetical merriment. You are the sunken cathedral, my friend. This is PRI, Public Radio International.
âThe Sunken Cathedralâ is the name of a piece for solo piano by Claude Debussy. The experts say that it is based on a Breton folktale about the lost cathedral city of Ysârhymes with âceaseââwhich allegedly sank beneath the waves one day when a woman stole the key to the seawall and the floodgates opened. But the experts donât know what theyâre talking about in this case. Theyâre making it up. Iâve found this to be true over and overâthe experts often donât know anything useful, really. First all women should have breast X-rays once a year and then, no, thatâs bad. First women should take hormone pills after menopause, then no. First we should eat eggs. Then, no, eggs are bad because they have cholesterol. Then, no, eggs are good because they give you good cholesterol. And the advice is offered with such arrogant assurance. Rozâs radio show is undermining some of that arrogance, and thatâs a good thing.
I talked to Gene, my editor, today, and when he asked I told him that I was making steady progress on my book of prosaic plums and that I now had a title for it:
Misery Hat
. Iâve sat on that poem all these years. It hurt that Peter Davison rejected it, and I turned against it and forgot about it. But I read it recently and thought it had some reasonably good turns, S-turns. Dryden has a nice passage about the French way of praising the turns in Virgil and Ovid: â
Delicat et bien tourné
are the highest commendation which they bestow on somewhat which they think a masterpiece.â
Forget it, never mind, it doesnât matter.
âMisery Hat,â
said my editor. âInteresting title.â I knew he didnât like it. I could hear that slight catch in his voice. But heâs happy with me right now because
Only Rhyme
is still selling.
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Y OU THINK this is all a game, donât you? Well, it isnât. Itâs serious. I helped my dog Smacko into the carâhe resists getting in the back seat and heâs a little stiff these daysâand I drove to Fort McClary with my music on shuffle. The Gap Band came on, singing âEarly in the Morning.â I hadnât really listened to the words before. For years, bizarrely, I paid almost no attention to the words in pop songs, even in Beatles songs. I heard them, and I could sometimes recite them, but I didnât care what they were aboutâthey were just semi-random vocalizations over a chordal groove
Geoff Ryman
Brandilyn Collins
Mia Caldwell
Rien Reigns
Yan Lianke
Bill Granger
Helenkay Dimon
Manuel Gonzales
Dylan Saccoccio
James Leck