Robert Hass Poetry Craft Lecture | Sewanee Writers' Conference

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 ธ.ค. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 11

  • @webspecific
    @webspecific 7 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Robert Hass, I go to sleep and wake up with you. You are a marvelous teacher, and this should be required in every creative writing program in the country. Love, Christy

  • @nathanhassallpoetry
    @nathanhassallpoetry หลายเดือนก่อน

    Stunning lecture. Can't wait to meet you in person later this week and have you read out here in Malibu at Caffeinated Verse! We'll post your performance and Q and A before the end of October, 2024.

  • @BUKCOLLECTOR
    @BUKCOLLECTOR 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Enjoyed your poetry and reading.
    I’m a poet specializing in Japanese forms: haiku, tanka, haibun, kyoka, senryu. I hope you don’t mind me sharing a tanka and my haiku, a tribute poem to Bashō’s frog with commentary by the late AHA founder and poet Jane Reichhold who considered my Basho haiku among her top 10 haiku of all time. What an honor.
    Here’s the Bashō poem and commentary:
    Bashō’s frog. . .
    four hundred years
    of ripples
    At first the idea of picking only 10 of my favorite haiku seemed a rather daunting task. How could I review all the haiku I have read in my life and decide that there were only 10 that were outstanding? Then realized I was already getting a steady stream of excellent haiku day by day through the AHA
    forum.
    The puns and write-offs based on Basho's most famous haiku are so
    numerous I would have said that nothing new could be said with this
    method, but here Al Fogel proved me wrong. Perhaps part of my delight in this haiku lies in the fact that I agree with him. Here he is saying one thing
    about realism-ripples are on a pond after a frog jumps in, but because it refers back to Basho and his famous haiku, he is also saying something about the haiku and authors who have followed him. We, and our work, are just ripples while Basho holds the honor of inventing the idea of "the
    sound of a frog leaping is the sound of water".
    As haiku spreads around the world, making ripples in more and larger ponds, its ripples are wider-including us all. But his last word reminds us all that we are only ripples and our lives are that ephemeral. It will be the frogs that will remain.
    ~~
    And my tanka:
    returning home
    from a Jackson Pollock
    exhibition
    I smear my face with paint
    and turn into art
    ~~
    -All love in isolation
    from Miami Beach,
    Florida.
    Al

  • @sydlawson3181
    @sydlawson3181 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I for one take major issue with the idea of *"escaping the narcicism of depth"* ...like can we talk about the narcicism of thinking depth is somehow beneath you??
    Like at a certain point the most radical thing a person can do is just inovate ways to be traditional again lol

    • @asteroidmonger
      @asteroidmonger 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Do you mean the narcissism of thinking the narcissism of thinking depth is beneath you, is beneath you?

  • @nozecone
    @nozecone 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Serious question: can anyone explain how the initialism "QED" works here (13:16): "Within two years, she's finished her first novel ... about a romantic triangle among three women QED"?

  • @BUKCOLLECTOR
    @BUKCOLLECTOR 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I hope you don’t mind me sharing the following poem, one of my all time favorite meta poetic poems by a poet named Howard Dull and the poem titled Suibhne Gheilt that I recently chanced upon and discovered. When I read it, I became speechless. And most of my poetry friends consider this as one of their all time favorites also. It was published in a 1970s anthology titled “ Open Poetry” I hope you enjoy and it proves to me that once Poetry hits you in your head and heart you could be the worst nefarious scoundrel with kings and Empires at your command....but you will relent! You will be transformed for the rest of your life.
    All love,
    Al
    Suibhne Gheilt
    1
    He has haunted me now for over a year
    that madman Suibhne Gheilt
    who in the middle of a battle
    looked up and saw something
    that made him leap up and fly
    over swords and trees
    - a poet gifted above all others -
    11
    How could a proud loud mouth
    who yelled KILL KILL KILL
    as he plowed done the enemy
    - heads rolling off of his sword -
    be so lifted up
    ( or fly up
    as those below saw it
    - wings beating)
    be so suddenly gifted
    with poetry
    and nest so high
    in Ireland’s tall trees?
    Is there a point
    where all paths cross?
    And why am I so drawn to him
    that all my questions
    seem shot in his direction?
    “And they ran into the woods
    and threw their lances
    and shot their arrows
    up through the branches”
    What parallels could I ever hope to find -
    my refusal to fight
    ( weaseling out on psychiatric grounds)?
    my leaving my country behind?
    my poetry?
    “and my wife wept
    on the path below. . .
    Oh memory is sweet
    but sweeter is the sorrel
    in the pool in the path below”
    I fly down every night
    to eat
    111
    Sweeney like the rest of us would have been better off if he had never anything to do with women.
    But the point of it lies hidden
    in a pool of milk
    in a pile of shit
    for you to see
    when a milkmaid smiles
    Sweeney like the rest of us flies down
    and when she pours the milk
    into the hole her heel made in the cowdung
    Sweeney like the rest of us kneels down and drinks
    and dies on the horn the cowherd hid in it.
    So before you have anything to do with women
    remember Sweeney the bird of Ireland
    lying on his back
    in the middle of that path
    in the moonlight.
    1V
    And on my way home
    this morning
    ( my wife
    waiting)
    my shadow
    racing up the path ahead of me
    I saw something
    ( a black stone?)
    thrown
    at the back of its head
    ducked
    and spun around
    so fast
    I almost fell down
    - it was a bird
    flying up into a tree
    V
    No good could come out of this war
    out of what burns in the heart of our highly disciplined
    John Q. Killer as a whole village bursts into one flame -
    the villagers streaming like tears
    towards the forest
    cover his helicopter’s blades
    blow the leaves off and
    and the flame towards. . .
    as we sit in front of our bubbles watching our president
    ( whose bubbletalk no one can escape and he is a little bit
    mad -calling the reporters in for an interview while he’s
    sitting on the bubble having
    a bubble movement) and first
    lady climb into their big bubble bed an Lucy, born of
    their own bubbles, crawls in between -
    “ Mah daddy has so many
    troubles
    turning the world into a bubble
    and sick of crossfire -
    the cries of the women and
    children flying over his head -
    he stumbled down to the
    riverbank and found,
    the wreckage twisted around the tree
    behind, his skull. . .
    Noises, there are noises,
    noises that can of themselves drive
    a man mad -NOISES!
    But last night the Stockhausen penetrated from the four
    sides of the auditorium, stripping each layer of feeling
    and thought until all that was left was something the size
    of a nut - so tiny, so hard, so impenetrable it was alone
    in the middle of an infinite space. . .
    -Howard Dull
    All love in isolation from Miami Beach, Florida,
    Al

  • @shabirmagami146
    @shabirmagami146 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    great lecture ...thank you

  • @zaidismail6470
    @zaidismail6470 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You are amazing

  • @alekdaniels
    @alekdaniels ปีที่แล้ว

    .