One life a poet has and in the end a laureate

by YankeeJim | July 1, 2010 at 04:01 pm
120 views | 0 Recommendations | 1 comment

Photos

Merwin

Merwin

see larger image

uploaded by YankeeJim

“Your absence has gone through me
Like thread through a needle.
Everything I do is stitched with its color.”

I love poetry and the poets that make it.

W.S. Merwin is nearly as old as my Dad, and he is now given the nation’s highest honor for his accomplishments. For him I give Hedging.

Hedging

Directions form dimensions shaped by our senses:

Up, down

Right, left

We realize three and are clocked by a fourth:

Forward, backward.

Einstein, I ask you to where soulful energy goes?

Except by contrivance, going backward in time is impossible.

 

Beings, we are propelled forward though have discretion to deviate about a moving datum.

Star masses burst as we see their past indicating a direction toward new mass or implosion into the less detectable.

Do we dare fix value on enlightenment over emptiness?

Thought to be empty is filled with unseen energy and inescapable power.

Soulful energy is conserved, operative in all dimensions for which purpose is beyond measurement though not beyond unrelenting imagination for a world without end.

Partially defined by four dimensions, bounded by elastic bubbles, ill-explained by dynamics that are neither contracting or expanding, but by spirit for which human instruments are yet invented for such discovery.

Time controls, as we know it is the one dimension out of which we may run.

 James A. George 2000

YankeeJim, Almond

 

W.S. Merwin Named Nation's 17th Poet Laureate

July 1, 2010

"A poem is such a one-on-one thing," says newly appointed poet laureate William S. Merwin. "You may have an audience, but still, everybody in the audience hears it individually."

July 1, 2010

The first time William S. Merwin heard poetry — as read to him by his mother — he was captivated. "As soon as I could make a pencil make letters and words on the page, I tried to write little poems," he recalls. He was 4 years old at the time.

Getting an early start paid off for Merwin. On Thursday, the Library of Congress officially announced that he will be the nation's latest poet laureate.

The 82-year-old, who lives on a former pineapple plantation in Maui, moved to Hawaii in the 1970s, inspired by his interest in Zen Buddhism. He was attracted to the religion because of its holistic approach to life: "It's a joy to be part of everything that's living, and to be able to give something back sometimes," Merwin tells NPR's Melissa Block.

Merwin thinks of his poetry in a very different way — not necessarily as having a specific social function. "A poem is such a one-on-one thing," he says. "You may have an audience, but still, everybody in the audience hears it individually."

He says "there's something very present and very personal" about both writing and reading poetry.

The poet doesn't "know what to think" of the honor he has received: "I don't want it to change my life, but on the other hand, I want to contribute whatever I can." He says that he's hoping to promote poetry by holding "gatherings of children, and talking with children and with students of all ages." Merwin has also discussed reaching out to poets who write in other languages.”

Advertisement
recommend This comment thread is now closed
1
Shark

This was beautifulsolvemygirlproblems.com

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from