the truncated version
Didja ever hear tell that at one point Marianne Moore, in her varyingly-long versions of "Poetry," thought maybe it should stop after not just the first 4 lines, but only the first part of the first line---
I, too, dislike it.
? I think I heard that some time. Anyway the idea's been coming back to me recently, as the title I've had in my head has had more than one poem (or beginning of poem, anyway) attached to it in these past coupla weeks, but all that's sticking is the first line. Should it stop there, I ask myself (and now the poetry people among ya), or could the struggle to flesh it out be worthwhile? It's such an aesthetic minefield, its milieu all heavy/Big. (I like to think I could keep it from the maudlin/mawkish, trite, general/Big, but I might be kidding myself about that.) Here 'tis:
Valediction, Overdue
Finally, it's just a town
("Scrap the whole thing" is certainly also a suggestion I'd not be offended by.)
I, too, dislike it.
? I think I heard that some time. Anyway the idea's been coming back to me recently, as the title I've had in my head has had more than one poem (or beginning of poem, anyway) attached to it in these past coupla weeks, but all that's sticking is the first line. Should it stop there, I ask myself (and now the poetry people among ya), or could the struggle to flesh it out be worthwhile? It's such an aesthetic minefield, its milieu all heavy/Big. (I like to think I could keep it from the maudlin/mawkish, trite, general/Big, but I might be kidding myself about that.) Here 'tis:
Valediction, Overdue
Finally, it's just a town
("Scrap the whole thing" is certainly also a suggestion I'd not be offended by.)
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Even if it does end up as "maudlin/mawkish, trite, general/Big,"the process is worthwhile. Plus, all of the aforementioned pitfalls are subject to disagreement among readers. Your "trite" might be someone's "profound." (Or vice versa.)
Flush it out!
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I like poems (or songs) that have only one line besides their title. It makes those single lines seem extra weighty, yet they have a nice breezy feeling because there's so much "negative space" (so to speak) around them.
My favorite is a translation of Basho's frog haiku that reads:
The old pond
A frog jumps in
Plop!
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yeah, i do dig the pregnancy of the understated. so much so, sometimes, that i fear i overstate by the size (or stage?) of the pregnancy of the understated. esp in lj entries... !
one good thing about being finished with it there is that i'd be finished with it now. you know, add a period & call it done.
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I'd elaborate, but... Eh, I'm done. :)
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i think there's some element of temporal and logical buildup in here, so i can't tell exactly if there's a priority for either or what.
not to argue with the premise and the exigence, but i wonder if 'just' will sustain the project for very long :). speaking from personal experience (in which no town ever went back to 'just').
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'just' doesn't hold both its 2 main takes in this case, which is not so much a shame as maybe a reason not to pick/use it, if i'm bein' brief/pregnant.
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ach, i know not how to talk of these shades
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"now" has sometimes opened the next line--- the now of the implied "now that" with a "you're" next...
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[am handling my own poetic issues at the moment:]
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hmmmm
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i appreciate your thoughts here. heck, maybe part of the problem is that there's so MUCH imagery/content hovering... i'm sure you know how that is!
distillation for later reading back into bigness--- it's kinda like making those condensed "add water" capsules that pop up into a dinosaur sponge or a lunar rover washcloth.
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