The 2006 and 11th Biennial
Waterloo Village, Stanhope, New Jersey.
September 28 – October 1, 2006
Part Two
Poetry In The Woods
Friday was Teachers' Day at the Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival
in Waterloo Village, Stanhope, N.J.
Early morning visitors trucked through light and intermittent rain,
but the festival organizers cast a spell that prevented precipitation during
the day's events.
Educators and poets on 'bus-man's holidays' wandered the wooded trails,
stepped around puddles and found the poets on stage working through images,
the what it said, the how it said it, the what it meant, the why it works.
Plus, each talking poet seemed to focus at some point in the
discussion on how to get students interested in poetry - writing and reading
and understanding it.
Billy Collins, U.S. Poet Laureate from 2001 to 2003, collects
definitions of poetry the way some people collect plastic monkeys, or
baseball cards, because "poetry is such a slippery word."
(Samuel Taylor) Colleridge defined poetry as "the best words in the best
order," Collins noted. (W. H.) Auden defined it as a "clear expression of
mixed feelings."
And, Archibald MacLeish called it a "synthesis of hyacinths and biscuits."
Simply put, Collins said, "Poetry is a home for ambiguity."
Poets are "prose avoidance systems." He explained that poets don't write to
the end of the line because they don't want to be journalists.
"Poetry lifts prose into pleasure," Collins said. Prose is written
in sentences while poetry is written in lines.
Collins' work is often remembered because of the humor that serves as a
thread or punch line in his verse. He acknowledged wordplay - something ALL
POETS DO IN CHOOSING THE RIGHT WORD - and conceded his work is influenced by
years of watching Merry Melody andn Loony Toons cartoons. He wasn't a Hanna-Barbera
man.
He said he delighted when the cartoon character pulled a lawn-mower out of
his pants, whether or not he was wearing pants in the first place. Collins
cited a poem with a character on a bridge, and then then character on the
bridge disappearing in the poem's next line. You can't do that in a novel,
he said.
Collins addressed the educators in the packed-out main stage,
"What is the poet trying to say? The implication is that they all failed."
Citing Emily Dickinson, when Collins shook his head sadly and
said, "she couldn't say it but she gave it a good try," the teachers erupted
in laughter and applause.
Calling it the one question a student should never ask his
teacher upon returning from an absence, Collins read Tom Wayman's poem DID I
MISS ANYTHING.
"Poetry is an interruption of silence," Collins said, citing the
silence that turns up in song.
He admitted, "There's something wacky in my poetry and I know I
try my best."
"Poetry - it can take a moment and freeze it, slow it down, detail
it... look into it," said poet Tony Hoagland.
Poetry, he says shows "what it's like to be inside that moment."
By reading each other's poetry and getting into the idiom, Hoagland
explained, the speech, the behavior, and the costumes all as idioms in the
poetry "links us together."
Hoagland said that a poem in another's idiom, or regionality, or specialty,
should be understandable. "Anything you need to understand the poem is in
the poem," or should be.
As an example he said if you write about combustible formula xyz, you should
also work in that you are writing about rocket fuel.
The author of SWEET RUIN and other collections, said that he does read
criticisms written about poetry. Asked, he recommended three books:
POETRY AS PERSUASION The Life of Poetry - Carl Dennis,
POETRY AND THE WORLD - Robert Pinsky, and
20th CENTURY PLEASURES - Robert Haas.
At 'literary row' in a series of sheltered three-sided tents, a few poets
groups talked up the cammaraderie of the lonely life of poets, so to speak.
There were listings for poetry contest, chapbook contests and places to get
together with other poets.
Among others with groups to join were:
The
Poetry Center at Passaic County Community College,
Poetry Society of America,
and
Academy of American Poets
The Geraldine R. Dodge 2006 Poetry Festival runs through Sunday.
Tickets are available on site. BLOGS AND LINKS
Jersey Writers
Another blogger on the scene Once in a Blue Muse - A Poet's journal
The Trouble With Poetry
The Trouble With Poetry - Part Two
Support this web site, shop at Amazon through this
link, thanks
The
Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival 2006
The Poetry Center
at Passaic County Community College
Poetry Society
of America
Academy of American
Poets
Yountakah
Country
Blue
Muse Poetry
Carnival
BOOKS OF INTEREST
THE TROUBLE WITH POETRY - Billy Collins
THE BEST AMERICAN POETRY OF 2006 - Guest Editor: Billy
Collins
POETRY 180 - Selected and with an Introduction by
Billy Collins
180 MORE EXTRAORDINARY POEMS FOR EVERY DAY - Selected
and with an Introduction by Billy Collins
THE PAINTED BED - Donald Hall
ITALIAN WOMEN IN BLACK DRESSES - Maria Mazziotti
Gillan
LATE FOR WORK - David Tucker
SWEET RUIN - Tony Hoagland
POETRY AS PERSUASION The Life of Poetry - Carl Dennis
POETRY AND THE WORLD - Robert Pinsky
20th CENTURY PLEASURES - Robert Haas
Part One
Part Three
Part Four
Part Five
Part Six
ORIGINAL CONTEXT
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