chris murray's *Texfiles*

"A note to Pound in heaven: Only one mistake, Ezra! You should have talked to women" --George Oppen, _Twenty Six Fragments_





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ManY PoETiKaL HaTs LisT:

Holly's Pirate-girl Hat, chrismurray in a straw hat, Michael Helsem's Gray Wyvern NOLA Fedora. Duchamp's Rrose Selavy's flirting hat. Max Ernst's Hats of The Hat Makes the Man. Jordan Davis' The Hat! poetry. hks' smelly head baseball cap. Samuel Beckett's Lucky's Black bowler hat, giving his oration on what's questionable in mankind, in *Waiting for 'God-ot'*. my friend John Phillips's 1969 dove gray fedora w/ wild feather. Bob Dylan's mystery lover's Panama Hat. Bob Creeley's Black Mountain Felt Boater Hat. Duke Ellington's Satin Top Hat. Acorn Hats of Tree. Freud's 1950 City Fedora. Joseph Brodsky's Sailor Cap. Harry K Stammer's Copper Hat Hell. Lewis LaCook's bowler hat(s). Tom Beckett's Bad Hair Day Furry Pimp Hat. Daughter Holly's black beret. harry k stammer's fez. Cat in the Hat's Hat & best hat, Googling Texfiles: crocheted hat with flames. Harry K Stammer's tinseled berets. Tex's 10 gallon Gary Cooper felt Stetson cowboy hat. Jordan Davis's fedora. Dali's High-heel Shoe Hat. Harry K Stammer's en-blog LAPD Hat & aluminum baseball cap. cap'n caps. NY-Yankees caps. the HKS-in-person-caps are blue or green no logos nor captions. Ma Skanky Possum 10's nighttime cap. moose antler hat. propeller beenie hat. doo rag. knit face mask hat. Bob Dylan's & photographer Laziz Hamani's panama hats. Mark Weiss's Publisher's Hat. Rebecca Loudon's Seattle-TX-Hats'n'boots.




Ever-Evolving Links:


Silliman's Links
Dominic Rivron
Unidentified
Br Tom @ One & Plainer
Dan Waber: ars poetica anthology
Dan Waber: altered books anthology
chris daniels: Notes to a Fellow Traveller
Chris Daniels: Toward an Anti-Capitalist Poetry
David Daniels: The Gates Of Paradise
subterranean poets: Beijing Poetry Group
Charles Alexander/Chax Press: Chaxblog
Headlines Poetry: the latest weblog entries
Henry Gould's AlephoeBooks
Julie Choffel's Understory
Tom Murphy's former one
Jean Vengua's New Okir
Roger Pao's Asian-American Poetry
Tom Lisk: Oilcloth and Linoleum
Kevin Doran
Reb Livingston's Cackling Jackal Blog
Janet Holmes: Humanophone
Lorna Dee Cervantes
Mark Young's gamma ways
Brian Campbell: Out of the Woodwork
Shanna's DIY Publishing Blog
Galatea Resurrects: a Poetry Review
Tom Beckett
John Sakkis: BOTH BOTH
New Francois Luong:Voices in Utter Dark, KaBlow!sm is...
Old Francois Luong: Voices in Utter Dark
Margin Walker: Andrew Lundwall
Free Space Comix: the latest BK Stefans blog
Adam Lockhart, Experimentalist Composer
Antic View: Alan Bramhall & Jeff Harrison
lookouchblog: Jessica Smith
MiPOradio
Web Log -- Charles Bernstein
Google Poem Generator: Leevi Lehto
Marie Mutsuki Mockett
Feral Scholar: Stan Goff
worderos: Tom Beckett
In Galatea's Purse
Japundit
Quiet Desperation: Jim Ryal
Luca Antara: Martin Edmond
Brief Epigrams: Ryan Alexander MacDonald
Radio My Vocabulary: 4 pm Sunday Poetry Streams
Mark Lamoreaux: [[[0{:}0]]]
Hot Whiskey Blog
louder
Nick Bruno: They Shoot Poets Don't They?
Joe Massey: Rooted Fool
Kate Greenstreet: every other day
heuriskein: Tom Orange
Chiaroscuro Metropoli: Tom Beckett
Behrle's latest spout!
Fluffy Dollars: Michelle Detorie
Jane Dark's Sugar High!
The Katherine Anne Porter Literary Center
(Charles) Olson Now: Michael Kellaher & Ammiel Alcalay
kari edwards' TranssubMUTATION
Notes on the Revival: Jeremy Hawkins
PurPur: Petrus Pokus
Snapper Missives: Scott Pierce
A Sad Day for Sad Birds II: Gina Meyers
Great Works: Peter Philpot
zafusy: experimental poetry journal
Writeboard: a collaborative writing tool
John Latta: Rue Hazard
KP Harris: Croissant Factory
Stephanie Young's New Site
Stephen Vincent's New Site
Portable Press@Yo~Yo Labs
Square America
Amy King's blog
Robert: Peyoetry Hut
Muisti Kirja: Karri Kokko
Karri Kokko's Blonde on Blonde
Yummeee Blog (recipes)
Nice Guy Syndrome: Tim Botta
Left Hook
Del Ray Cross: anachronizms
Juan Cole: Informed Comment
BuzzFlash - Daily Headlines, Breaking News, Links
Aaron McCollough
Chris Lott's Cosmopoetica
Chad Parenteau
Little Emerson
Fever, Light--by Sawako Nakayasu
Second Wish
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Alison Croggon
Radical Druid
Ron is Ron: the Ron Silliman Cartoon by Jim Behrle
Dagzine: Positions, Poetics, Populations: Gary Norris
Shadows within Shadows: Tom Beckett
Self Similar Writing: Jukka Pekka Kervinen
The Little Workshop: Cassie Lewis
Sky Bright: Jay Rosevear
Poesy Galore: Emily Lloyd
Lisa Jarnot's Blog
Poetry Hut: Jilly Dybka (has moved here)
Pornfeld: Michael Hoerman
Seven Apples: Justin Ulmer
Hi Spirits: Andrew Burke
Bacon Bargain!: Joe Massey
Ivy is here: Ivy Alvarez
Whimsy Speaks: Jeff Bahr
Umbrella: Jeff Wietor
Chicanas! (Susana L. Gallardo)
Masters of Photography
Blog of Disquiet: Gary Norris' Teaching Blog
Suzanna Gig Jig
Bad with Titles: Jay Thomas
Spaceship Tumblers! Tony Tost
Desert City: Ken Rumble
E-Po
Zotz!
Optative Mood: Tim Morris
ecritures bleues: Laura Carter
The Ingredient: Alli Warren
Skanky Possum Pouch
Slight Publications
Jewishy-Irishy: Laurel Snyder
Sea-Camel: Alberto Romero Bermo
Growing Nations: Jordan Stempleman
Tom Raworth
Entropy and Me: Hal Johnson
Scott Pierce: Snapper's Junk
Chicano Poet: Reyes Cardenas
Semio-Karl M&M
Stephen Vincent
Hoa Nguyen/Teacher's & Writers
a New Word Placements
Narcissus Works: Anny Ballardini
Richard Lopez
Tributary: Allen Bramhall
The_Delay: Chris Vitiello
Jukka Pekka Kervinen: Nonlinear Poetry
Lanny Quarles: Phaneronoemikon
Clifford Duffy: Fictions of Deleuze & Guattari
DagZine
Carrboro Poetry Festival
Steve Evans: Third Factory
DEBORAH PATILLO
SKANKY POSSUM PRESS
Tim Peterson: Mappemunde
WOOD'S LOT
Geof Huth: DBQP
Ann Marie Eldon
Jim Behrle: The Jim Side
Ray Bianchi:Postmodern Collage Poetry
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Diaryo
New Broom
Flingdump Scattershot
Tony Tost: Unquiet Grave
Grapez
SB POET
Mark Young's Pelican Dreaming
|||AS/IS2|||
Li's A Private Studio
Anny Ballardini's Poet's Corner
Tom Beckett: Vanishing Points
Dumbfoundry
BadGurrrlNest
Jean Vengua's Okir
Hear-it dot org: info on hearing problems
Tim Yu's Tympan
James Yeager's Modern Lives
Tony Robinson: Geneva Convention
Daniel Nestor's Unpleasant Event
Ex-Lion Tamer
Carlos Arribas: Scriptorium
David Nemeth
Ela's Incertain Plume
Mairead Byrne's Heaven
Catherine Daly
Black Spring
Br.Tom's Finish Yr Phrase
Shin Yu Pai: makura-no-soshi
Harry K. Stammer: Downtown LA
Corina's Fledgling Wordsmith
Jilly Dybka's Poetry Hut
Ben Basan's Luminations
Katey: Chewing on Pencils
YaY!! Eileen Tabios: Chatelaine Poetics !
Jill Jones: Ruby Street
Geoffrey Gatza's BlazeVox
Bill Allegrezza's P-Ramblings
Gary Sullivan's Elsewhere
GoldenRuleJones
Poetry_Heat
Bookslut
Chickee's SuperDeluxeGoodPoems
As-Is !
John Latta's Hotel Point
Sawako Nakayasu's Ongoing Show
Shanna Compton's Brand New Insects
Crag Hill
kari edwards: transdada
Fluss
Michael Helsem's Gray Wyvern
Word Placement
Bogue's Blog
Jordan Davis: Equanimity
Robert Flach's Unadulterated Text
Michelle Bautista
Ironic Cinema
Mike Snider
Farewell Tonio!

In Through the Out Door
The Blonde Brunette
Awake at Dawn on Someone's Couch is Toast
Jukka-Pekka Kervinen:Non-Linear
Xpress(ed) !
Chris Lott's Ruminate
Venepoetics
Laura: Yellowslip
Stick Poet Super Hero
Mighty Jens!
Radio UTA: Toni's Thursday Poetry Show
Tim Morris: Lection
Gabe Gudding
Constant Critic
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Waves of Reading
Jhananin's Insite
Fanaticus
AdvExpo
Stephen Vincent
Stephanie Young: New Well Nourished Moon
Kasey Silem Mohammad's Newest Limetree
Lanny Quarles: (solipsis)//:phaneronoemikon
States Writes
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Simulacro
Braincase Links
Sentence
Sor Juana
73 Urban Bus Journeys
Poeta Empirica
poetry for the people: canwehaveourballback?
Ernesto Priego's Never Neutral
Nick Piombino's Fait Accompli
Weekly Incite blogresearch
Jim Behrle's first monkey
Jim Behrle's Monkey's Gone to Heaven
David Kirschenbaum's Boog City
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Laurable
David Hess Heathens in Heat
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Li Bloom's Abolone
Ron Silliman
Chris Sullivan's Bloggchaff
Chris Sullivan's Slight Publications
Chris Sullivan's Department of Culture
Kasey S. Mohammad's Old-New Limetree
Kasey's Old Limetree
James Meetze: Brutal Kittens
Cassie Lewis: The Jetty
Joseph Mosconi's Harlequin Knights
Nada Gordon's Ululate
ultimate: Stephanie Young's First Well Nourished Moon
Steve Evans: Third Factory
Noah Eli Gordon's Human Verb
Jean Vengua's Blue Kangaroo
Sawako Nakayasu: Texture Notes
Free Space Comix: BK Stefans
Crosfader
Malcolm Davidson's eeksy peeksy
Marsh Hawk Press group
Catherine Meng's Porthole Redux
Josh Corey's Cahiers de Corey
Very Nice! Shampoopoetry
UTA's Lit Mag: ZNine
Wild Honey Press
Jacket
JFK's Poetinresidence
Malcolm Davidson's Tram Spark poems
HYepez: RealiTi
HYpez: Mexperimental
Aimee Nez's Gila Monster
BestMaX: Jim Behrle's jismblog
Cori Copp's Littleshirleybean
Jordan Davis: Million Poems
Eileen Tabios: Corpsepoetics [see Chatelaine above]
YaY! Liz's Thirdwish
Ultra Linking
Henry Gould's HG Poetics




Saturday, October 11, 2003

 

Dept. of Bloggo-aesthetic-poetic-train & (clutterlove) poems:

TRainRain

[date/subject/job sort: Oct. 11 11:55 p.m., Arlington rainy Saturday night Texasooo-OOOoo & Index of owow/epa/hyperlinks]


we train two miles
away going away
now trainintherain
trainintherain
traintrain
intherain
traintrain
“saturday+nite”
where google like to say: purple
dinosaur?--
"did you mean
train rain____________[IMG] trainrain.jpg"
still the ooooo ooooooo summary
for this [google interrupt with
"Chinese
(Traditional)?" Intelligence just in: this has nothing
to do with drains in Spain?]
just say no-
no to this vast skull Jack so hollow
language is its own drama: go
dharma,
chanting like smoking
strong to this address www.epa.gov/owow/
oceans/lagoon/images/ self reflexive hyperlink
okayed ahead of time between partners

to select "2palms.jpg" ordinary
(or hey--just take your time
sifting through all of these images?)
yeah

oh but please can we be more

specific or make love:
i hope so for all our sakes: www.epa.gov/owow/oceans/lagoon/
images/
trainrain.jpg" :
Love, if you love

me we
ooOOOoo

are in trainrain now



chris justisteningtoTRainRain murray


chris at 11:55 PM |

 

A visit to the Saatchi Gallery in London becomes occasion for some useful questioning of avant guarde aesthetics in relation to the socio-political as context:
"No freedom without rigor,
no play without impacting and being impacted
by other people."--Josh Corey


chris at 10:25 PM |

 

News on Anti-FTAA Campaign, Sao Paulo, Brazil ** :


Anti-FTAA campaign forms national assembly and demands referendum

São Paulo, 10/6/2003

The Social Assembly of the National Campaign against FTAA on October
4th and 5th in São Paulo brought together representatives of social
organizations and movements from different Brazilian states and debated
the direction of the campaign and different points of view in the
struggle against the FTAA. The assembly established an October 2004
deadline for obtaining an official referendum on Brazil's participation
in the FTAA. The Campaign obtained an unofficial referendum with the
participation of more than ten million people in September of 2002. The
PT (Worker's Party) participated at the start of the campaign, but
later removed itself from the referendum. In 2003, the Campaign pledged
to collect signatures to demand an official referendum. By September
16, two million signatures had been collected and delivered to
Congress.

A good part of the debate was dominated by the matter of the campaign's
position in relation to the Lula government. Some participants urged
active opposition, while others, in the understanding that the Lula
administration is a under attack, urged institutional dialogue as a
means to influence the government. The debate is particularly relevant
to the position of the Brazilian government and Mercosul in the last
meeting of the FTAA negotiating committee in Trinidad and Tobago. The
Brazilian government wants to remove certain topics from the treaty.
Some believe that the Lula government is taking steps to limit FTAA
negotiation on controversial issues such as intellectual property and
government investment and spending. However, critics say that even if
Brazil's proposal wins favor, the treaty will continue to force
deregulation in international trade, which can impact negatively on
workers and the environment.


**email forwarded by Chris Daniels, 10/11/03


chris at 3:14 PM |

 

The man with a mandolin (yes!)
& some serious inquiry on Paul Lake's "Enchanted Loom" article in the current CPR (scroll down to Wed., Oct.1, *Sonneteering*). Welcome to Texfiles, Mike Snider!


chris at 6:48 AM |

 

News of the Day: *'Justice denied' at Guantanamo*
(By Rachel Clarke
BBC News Online in Washington) :

A diverse group of ex-judges, diplomats and former military lawyers is urging the US Supreme Court to intervene on behalf of hundreds of men being held without trial by the government...."



chris at 6:22 AM |

 

Profile:
Lewis LaCook interviews Nick Piombino about blogging life, for Sidereality--also featuring Nick's poems and other writings: YaY!!


chris at 5:54 AM |

 

"Il mare si calma, le catene si spezzano (*Si quaeris*--Monday Sept. 29)"
Thanks for letting me wrap that around a little bit--
it was getting a bit cool in here... : ) Welcome to Texfiles, Tonio!



chris at 5:38 AM |

 


Listening: "The Boy Who Wouldn't Hoe Corn," --Alison Kraus & Union Station: "He turned his back and walked away, saying, You little miss'l rue the day--givin' me the devil cuz I wouldn't hoe corn... ."



Cafe Nine: "The Boy Who wouldn't Hoe Corn"



i.
so yearn
for god-you-never-know-what, f-
oreverhuman
vanity walking two
by four dried kernels
between dirt-sky
really dust
what else if not minor chording between--finger pickin' string
music

ii.
can I break your heart?

iii.
if like a good sit-still listener would
sit at table

politesse no
crossing legs arms fingers drummin' those wet surfaces

iv.
of oh my

v.
when "The Boy Who Wouldn't Hoe Corn"

lilts across your sacred
sip of
dear

vi.
be
lucky

you--if it doesn't make you loam,
lay down,
down, oh

down--because you stop a minute
right then & there, so much
eye kiss:

vii.
even "you rue the day
you were born--
givin' me the devil
cuz' i wouldn't hoe corn."

oh yeah & scratch:

& no:
oh no
to it:

viii.
what?
we're damned, see?

See: this is why
some folks have to have it:
I swear on dirt road gutteral drama of every my--

religion--
that mannered cur--
Plato'z

right again,
music:
it is--sirens!--

ix.
almost too Odysseusdangerous
for this mango pine highway 180 Kendrick Park chapel
light dirty flannel plaid daily world
music, do I have to say again,
love?


chris m


chris at 2:55 AM |

Friday, October 10, 2003

 

Dept.of Reading Past Everyday Lives
& Optimistic Technological Helpmates

Just Reach Out and Touch Some
Fish:


From Reader's Digest, November 1941

"The Bell System"

"An inventive New Yorker who was leaving town for a few days and didn't wish to trouble his friends with feeding his treasured tropical fish, worked out a simple system for feeding them himself by long-distance telephone. Using the cardboard out of a shirt [a store-bought or a dry-cleaned men's dress shirt?], he fashioned a spoonlike device with a long handle, pricked a number of small holes in the the spoon end to make a shaker. Then he removed the cover from the telephone box [?--what are these] and wired the end of the shaker handle to the bell clapper, filled the shaker with fish food, set the tank on the floor under the telephone box with the shaker poised above the water, and headed out of town with a carefree heart."

"A couple of hundred miles from home he put in a call to his own number, listened complacently to nobody answering, seeing in his mind's eye a day's supply of fish food being wafted gently on to the water by the vibration of the ringing bell [what is this, a kinder, gentler, Pavlov or BF Skinner?]. It worked and the fish did fine. --[originally published in] Rockefeller Center Magazine [um, well of course...]" (129)

Yeah, okay. But if it were me I'd be worried the whole time that some little something would throw the contraption out of wack: a cockroach would wander over it and the entire box of food would spill or something... Or: telemarketers and bill collectors would call ten times each day and the fish would die from nodding heads and repeating *just take it out of my other credit card,* or from the grief of being culturally guilt-tripped, or: just like people feeding steadily at McDonald's: from gross overfeeding?


chris at 9:51 PM |

 

I'm honored: my humble thanks, Ernesto!

[cf. scroll to poem, "Pluperfect @ 83%," Mon. 10/6]


chris at 12:55 PM |

 

From Stephen Jonas ** :

Cante Jondo for Soul Brother Jack Spicer,
His Beloved California & Andalusia of Lorca



Spain is located somewhere between Polk Street and Laguna Beach/

          as you cross the Oakland Bridge into Portugal/

Oh, that Spicer/
          he was a flamenco, that one/
                  for wld save America from

the abuses of rime. Like Lorca (our Fedy) was 'gipsified.'

Heard Bird's playing & for three years
          didn't know the taste of meat. sd. he didn't know

music had attained to it. A tear & one blue note upon yr brow, baby.
...


(160)

*Stephen Jonas, Selected Poems. Joseph Torra, ed. Hoboken, Talisman House, 1994.


chris at 2:05 AM |

Thursday, October 09, 2003

 

Check out Radio UTA poetry: right now!! (click on the Listen Now button)

Today's RadioUTA readers are from (sorry!--need to clarify: not Toni's students but) the Fort Worth Haiku Society.

I'm off in a bit to the after-reading at Coffee Haus, Mesquite Street in Arlington. New students coming tonight: Hi Jahananin! See ya in Mesquite Street poetry!


chris at 5:35 PM |

 

Wow: some powerful thinking goin' on--check this out!

"Perhaps the best work is circular, turning obsessively back on the same words again and again until their histories are revealed—basic, embodied, utterly new. "--Tim Yu, "Letter to Robert Creeley"


chris at 4:35 PM |

 

From Kent Johnson's and Alexandria Pappaditsas'sThe Miseries of Poetry :
(Austin, TX: Skanky Possum Press, 2003)




Fragment

[Moths have eaten here. Who sent them?]

they will remember us
by our pieces. Our torsos
will move them to poetry.
They will put our parts on parade,
to imagine what we were,
so to forget what they,
dreaming us, are.

--Attalyda, provenance and dates unknown. From papyrus discovered in the Montazah Palace find, Alexandria, Egypt, 1998.



chris at 12:43 PM |

 

UnTexing the vote:
how to make sure your voice is heard
(in its proper western
um ... store?).


Thanks for posting this strange tale over at Harlequin Knights, Joseph.


chris at 3:15 AM |

 

from Kent Johnson, Texfiles Poet of the Week:

"Poetry

[ Rotted away.]

What [does] poetry do for the world?

[ Rotted away.]

--Anonymous fragment. Discovered in the Montazah find.

(22)

Kent Johnson & Alexandra Papaditsas, The Miseries of Poetry: Traductions from the Greek. Austin: Skanky Possum, 2003


chris at 2:08 AM |

 

Hugs going out to Danny O'Connell: thanks for sending more pics!


chris at 1:46 AM |

 

Moving on through the Midnight Hour,
here's to Introducing: Texfiles Poet of the Week:

Kent Johnson,
the many voiced:
"Whatever we are, the Owners Association members around the Paris Review roundtable would seem to be unaware of our existence."--Kent Johnson (in Lit Vert, 5)


"The whole problem began, in a sense, with The Beatles."--Love, Jack [Spicer] (Kent Johnson, Lit Vert, 5)

"Yes, it's true: the Language poets airbrushed me out of Leningrad"--Kent Johnson (Lit Vert, 5)


"But here, as the saying goes, we are. Here also, please, is a poem by a youth named Leonel Rugama whom we have invited too, except sadly he was beheaded long ago, at 20 years, by Green Beret students in the country of Nicaragua:

The Earth Is A Satellite Of The Moon

Apollo 2 cost more than Apollo 1
Apollo 1 cost plenty.
Apollo 3 cost more than Apollo 2
Apollo 2 cost more than Apollo 1
Apollo 1 cost plenty.
Apollo 4 cost more than Apollo 3
Apollo 3 cost more than Apollo 2
Apollo 2 cost more than Apollo 1
Apollo 1 cost plenty.
Apollo 8 cost a whole shit-load of money, but no one minded
because the astronauts were Protestant,
they read the Bible from the moon, astounding and delighting
every Christian, and on their return Pope Paul VI
gave them his blessing.
Apollo 9 cost more than all of these put together
including Apollo 1 which cost plenty.
The great-grandparents of the people of Acahualinca
were less hungry than the grandparents.
The great-grandparents died of hunger.
The grandparents of the people of Acahualinca were less hungry
than the parents. The grandparents died of hunger.
The parents of the people of Acahualinca were less hungry
than the children of the people there.
The parents died of hunger.
The people of Acahualinca are less hungry than the children
of the people there. The children of the people of Acahualinca, because of
hunger, are not born, though
they hunger to be born, even to just die of hunger.

Blessed are the poor for they shall inherit the moon."--Osama Hussein (Kent Johnson, Lit Vert 5)



Um...
as a lowly blogger, I rest my case, which is to say... YaY!!--
We have a poet so savvy, versatile, & acerbic in the face of all kinds of hegemony:
Thank You
to Kent Johnson,
who is

*Texfiles Poet of the Week*
Oct. 9-15, 2003

Kent: Keep On.



chris at 12:50 AM |

Wednesday, October 08, 2003

 

New *Texfiles Poet of the Week*
coming up in the Midnight Hour!--Hey, Baby:
Lookin Good!


chris at 11:17 PM |

 

Announcing:

The new prose poem journal edited by DFW poet Brian Clements, and published by DFW poet and publisher (Firewheel Press), Joe Ahearn: Sentence: first issue due out on Oct. 18.

This just in from Brian:

" *Sentence* is the only international journal dedicated to the prose poem tradition. With the help of contributing editors Russell Edson, Maxine Chernoff, Peter Johnson, and Michel Delville, we have put together a collection of stellar prose poems, essays, translations, and reviews; and after a year and a half of work, we’re ready!"


chris at 5:20 PM |

 

Hey!--Ooooooooopps:

Got some dates confused folks. I had written this:

save some time this evening to stop by here: Texfiles Poet of the Week, Eileen Tabios, will be audblogging her poetry!


But it turns out that the much anticipated audblog from Eileen will happen next week on Tuesday, Oct. 14. Sorry for any confusion caused over that!--but not to worry: please save the time for a listen next Tuesday.

cm


chris at 4:34 PM |

 

Very gracious of Y'all at Marsh Hawk Press --thanks!


chris at 3:04 PM |

 

! O O
poems
15
days
!


chris at 2:49 AM |

 

From Carolyn Forche** :

The Colonel

What you have heard is true. I was in his house. His wife carried a tray of coffee and sugar. His daughter filed her nails, his son went out for the night. There were daily papers, pet dogs, a pistol on the cushion beside him. The moon swung bare on its black cord over the house. On the television was a cop show. It was in English. Broken bottles were embedded in the walls around the house to scoop the kneecaps from a man's legs or cut his hands to lace. On the windows there were gratings like those in liquor stores. We had dinner, rack of lamb, good wine, a gold bell was on the table for calling the maid. The maid brought green mangoes, salt, a type of bread. I was asked how I enjoyed the country. There was a brief commercial in Spanish. His wife took everything away. There was some talk then of how difficult it had become to govern. The parrot said hello on the terrace. The colonel told it to shut up, and pushed himself from the table. My friend said to me with his eyes: say nothing. The colonel returned with a sack used to bring groceries home. He spilled many human ears on the table. They were like dried peach halves. There is no other way to describe this. He took one of them in his hands, shook it in our faces, dropped it into a water glass. It came alive there. I am tired of fooling around he said. As for the rights of anyone, tell your people they can go fuck themselves. He swept the ears to the floor with his arm and held the last of his wine in the air. Something for your poetry, no? he said. Some of the ears on the floor caught this scrap of his voice. Some of the ears on the floor were pressed to the ground.
(16)

** Carolyn Forche, The Country Between Us. New York: Harper & Row, 1981.


chris at 12:33 AM |

 

There's definitely a poem in this summary/response of yours to Susan Bordo's "Hunger as Ideology," Mindy-- a poem that matters. I'm hearing it strongly in the summary, midway, where you riff on the many things Bordo collides in and with, to bring home her significant critique.


chris at 12:18 AM |

Tuesday, October 07, 2003

 

damn. sound combo out my door in ghetto here:
Harley (loud exhaust not unpleasant sounds of) pipes, in contrast to sax (artsy, measured, smooth notes) on (Listening... ) old Love Jones. Yeah, well--knowledge out of contradiction: Foucault might have liked this.


chris at 11:43 PM |

 

Okay (this just has to be said): What's HOT?-- Chris Lott, Ruminate: Rock On...

At Chris's, 2 differing dialogues going on over poetics--# one (well, of course it would be # 1 in my estimation... for obvious reasons?), an in-depth conversation with Texfiles Poet of the Week, God-has-green-wings-Eileen Tabios, in which Chris explains his consternation with *post-avant* poetry, and Eileen leads him down the garden path of beauty and knowledge (well, okay, I tried to say something in there, too, but not nearly as eloquently as the two of them). And # two?--Chris kindly explains the what and why of being uncertain about what's going on in a fine poem posted yesterday at Limetree, to which Kasey responds at Ruminate. My point?--Chris Lott is Mr. Uncertainty Expanding, which leads to the need for dialogue--and that's a good (hot) thing. Both the need for and the actuality. Well, hey, what I want to say is, Chris, Keep Asking!


chris at 8:09 PM |

 

Bravo: Tim Yu

Also: read his assessment of the Houlihan problem--given that some time has gone by to reflect on it all. Well done, Tim--thank you for adding balanced perspective and clarity to a situation that once again threatened to become meaningless flame-out.


chris at 5:08 PM |

 

Update Regarding the Proposed Dialogue on Poetics at Webdelsol:

Yesterday Kent Johnson and I decided not to go ahead right at this moment with organizing a dialogue on poetics, which had been proposed to be hosted at Webdelsol. Kent emailed Mike Neff of webdelsol to let him know of our decision (webdelsol was to host the dialogue/event). In part, the decision not to go ahead resulted from hesitation to participate on the part of many otherwise actively interested parties. The hesitation stemmed mostly from practical reasons: people are just very busy right now and find it hard to commit to this kind of focused, prolonged, public-rhetorical activity.

Secondarily, the hesitation stemmed from uncertainty about the positional neutrality of the webdelsol venue. If webdelsol both hosted and participated via high profile representatives of its writing staff, then how could it also claim to be neutral and disinterested regarding some of the reasons for the dialogue (in some ways though not only this way, it arose as a question about Joan Houlihan's positioning, given her inflammatory rhetorical style and likely participation in a webdelsol-hosted dialogue)? Michael Neff has emailed today in defense of the proposed venue, indicating that this question misconstrues webdelsol's place in this. Unfortunately in doing so, he has also begun taunting and name calling, as well, which is distasteful and makes us glad we did not pursue this venue, afterall. To answer such from him, simply and without intending to inflame the situation further: we have changed our minds about this for reasons we find sound. Name calling and taunting have no place in a reasonable debate, certainly not in its eventuality, but also not in its proposal and inception. So let's all just chill for a bit, shall we?

We are considering another venue for this kind of dialogue. More on that soon. Thanks for your interest and your patience.


chris at 11:12 AM |

 

"House & Universe:"

"... This is rather the poetic phenomenon of pure liberation, of absolute sublimation. The image is no longer under the domination of things, nor is it subject to the pressures of the unconscious. It floats and soars, immense in the free atmosphere... through the poet's window the house converses about immensity with the world... opens its doors to the world. ... And what a great world it would be if, every morning, every object in the house could be made anew in our hands... ."

Gaston Bachelard, *The Poetics of Space* (transl. Maria Jolas) Boston: Beacon Press, p. 69.


chris at 1:44 AM |

Monday, October 06, 2003

 

Listening: Alison Kraus, Peter Gabriel, Macy Gray on heavy light-light rotation.

Walking this evening?--fog! All over!

It was like cinema 1930s Hound of the Baskervilles, only on brick apartment avenues with McDonalds trash all over the sidewalks and greenish water coming from skeletal lawn sprinklers going bonkers to water the mud even though it rained last night and today. Everything is way too green haired and heavy aired here. A fern was hanging from the trunk of a pecan tree--trying to take root in it, I think. RayBradbury'sville, for sure.


chris at 10:06 PM |

 

A Few Words on Barry Schwabsky's Opera (Meritage Press, 2003):

These extremely artful poems, individually (including the writer's careful attention to minute details in each poem) and then again as an intriguing whole, fascinate me. They draw one in from both perspectives, the large and the smaller views, simultaneously--a not uncomfortable predicament in terms of result, per the ways Schwabsky sends forth this verbal art. They are like looking at one of those photographs of an object, say, a face, enlarged to consume an entire wall, but of course up close each point of what was thought to be the comfortable blur of plain graininess actually turns out to have other entire images--full of other stories--at work within the whole. Captivating, almost overwhelming, but in ways well worth contemplating, studying forth.

This is from "Drafts (of Water)" :

Unless patterns pursue themselves like waves, Luisa,
unless patterns ... unless they
pursue themselves ... unless
waves... but let me put it this way:
sea light will not be cajoled, Luisa,

into sufficient confusion
except on condition you explain realism at the
            dinner table:
subscription to water
wilderness of water

...

he eyes her eyes,
starminded.

(21)


It would be easy to stop paying attention here and just fog off into the congenial semiotic flow. It's not only the subtle, implicit critique of "realism" that might be missed, though. What else would be missed is the too-much: the more-than-naming, the excess of what is delicate, pressing and refusing to be "cajoled" in and by the driven flow of predictability: "patterns," endlessly chasing themselves around in the "sea-light." Indeed such is always in danger of being missed and yet is always missed--so longed for, if only because such can only be intuited from the “wilderness of water,” or that fluidity which holds what can be known, alongside what escapes knowing and *any* kind of naming. This predicament asks for consideration of what is both unquantifiable and qualitative, what happens when we participate in attempts to name things even though hopelessly “starminded” much of the time. We cannot afford to let go our *starmindedness* but are neverthe less caught up in the need to account for detail even while flowing in what is conceptualized as a poetic whole, here, a constellated, though happily unnameable poetic universe. One wants more, indeed feels the worn corners of a paperback Beckett slowly fraying in the back pocket during reading moments such as this.

But here is another reminder of the inclusively contradictory large and small views taken in simultaneously yet without collateral damage or loss, in the sense of being forced to favor one view over the other while also being made aware of what remains unnameable:

Miranda

If you give up the right to remain silent
you die. If the wind could slip

this old shirt off you might see
bones as damp as winter. Time

grows cloudy in this silo. Another sun
will wring the season out. Assignment:

Write one poem ommitting reference
to God. Your only chance may be to keep

your own appointed counsel, striking tense
or careless poses in keeping with the lateness

of this hour in which you’re caught up
short, at the last possible moment

in the most unexpected way.

(97)


There is here a very slippery “You,” involved with the speaker, converging as it does in differing senses of “Miranda”--as familiar legal dictum, as possible person apostrophized--and these two ride out the wave of the poem together more than pleasingly, in fact, throughout, in what is named, sure, but also in delicately unnameable ways, or “in the most unexpected way.” And what else is, perhaps, “unexpected”? By the time we get to the use of “silo,” the knaw of knowing is near certain: this is not only that cylindrical structure full of corn out Rural Route 10, but also that structure in the desert, full of power-polity’s intention for (I will qualify here: I mean, *god forbid*) this planet’s final end. All of that part of the awe in the flow, and a wavering “You,” to speak with, to boot. Very nice.

So, with these poems: keep your eyes completely open under the water, which is to say, open in several worlds at once when reading and listening-hearing what is being said, or as others have noted in praise of Schwabsky’s work: what is *sung.*





chris at 5:34 PM |

 

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chris at 3:51 PM |

 

Pluperfect @ 83%



had been chrome humidity hum
& we are our own drive
on what
bent of 1-
800 we hire
safe signs & moonlight

drivers where history had been sliding
concrete abuttments by awash
out in the no of Hallmark snow
the sign: 71 old Olympus Fstop

degrees of liquid silver monitor
flashing heavenly gate
light to chant “drive
friendly”--on our way aware of dinner
traffic

metal jam & what piles up is plum basso
popping to reprogram my heart
beat in whizzing earball guitars
but here’s a truck just like
someone had said

I miss you
with some you & I
still in it

going by in hello yellow of twig metal
streetlight glow button
eyes

glow where
did all that come from?
the one day
Walmart just sprang right
to a cell phone ringing
everywhere

up Exit 38HC loop 12
one quarter mile

away now
yesterday


chris murray


chris at 2:38 PM |

 

Cloudy, rainy, not unpleasantly tho. Just cooled off. Birds are liking it, making a lot of bird noise, bird words, bird flap, chitty-chatter ya kno? Birds--my favorite non human animate form. Regrettable that somewhere along the evolutionary freeway wings got phased out, as many have noted, tho.


chris at 12:42 PM |

Sunday, October 05, 2003

 

Blogging from Heather's friend, David's house. Hard to figure out the mouse on this laptop--toshiba, nice! David is taking us out to dinner at a fancy place in Dallas, Dragon Fly (at first I misheard it as Jack in the Box--oh my weird ears!). But for now it's mostly pistachios--Holly and Heather are *getting ready*--which for these girls could take a while. I just clicked on Guillermo's poem-reading so David and I could listen. Way cool, he says (and he rarely listens to poetry!). More soon...


chris at 7:14 PM |

 

On yr Insight: Rock on, JahanaNin! I really like that (scroll down for it) poem.


chris at 5:24 AM |

 

On the Bowery Poetry Club:
here's a fine report from Nick Piombino on yesterday's (Sat. 4 Oct.) poetry readings--poets Lynne Dreyer and Steve McCaffery-- as well as announcement of the next readings.

And, adding in here, a link to Nada Gordon, who offers her senusal-sexy response (likewise, below). This is Where Nada has posted her fine introduction to Lynne Dreyer/Bowery Poetry Club, Monday, Oct.6.


 

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