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Poetry News

3-year-old can recite more poetry than you can

Remember that cute video of a  Billy Collins-reciting toddler? Well, the mini-bard is back, now with some Alfred, Lord Tennyson to boot. Where did the adorable tyke pick up his remarkable talent for memorization? All we know for sure is that his YouTube videos have way more views than Collins’.

From ABC News:

Samuel’s parents began reading to him at an early age, and he began to speak when he was just a one-year-old. Six months later, he was already memorizing books and reciting them.

“He’s always had a gift for memorizing things. He had ‘Green Eggs and Ham‘ memorized, so we started reading him other things, just poetry we liked,” said Della.

Samuel particularly liked the poem “Litany,” by Billy Collins.

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Poetry News

William Blake reads “Reeds of Innocence”

(via PoetryAnimations)

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Poetry News

Healing Haiti with poetry

In the aftermath of the Haitian earthquake, Dr. Aurora Francois, a Haitian-American educator, began writing poetry as a way of coping with grief. She has now compiled a book of poems and a companion CD entitled A Beloved Daughter of Haiti. A portion of the proceeds from the book will go toward organizations involved in the relief effort.

Read more in the South Florida Times:

The theme of the book and CD is “Hope inspires in any language,” Francois said. The messages in the music and poetry would help bring healing to her native land.

Samples of three of the CD tracks can be heard on Francois’ website: We Shall Rise Again, The Optimist Child and A Special Prayer for Helping Hands.

Francois is the first Haitian-American principal in Palm Beach County, which, she said, was an asset in relating to the 300 children of Haitian descent – a third of the student population of her school, Barton Elementary, 1700 Barton Rd., Lake Worth.

She wrote poetry that was inspirational, lyrics from the soul that embody a sense of hope that a new Haiti would emerge. In all she composed 13 poems and melodies in 12 days after the earthquake.

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Criticism

The sultry and stormy Earl of Rochester

In 17th century England, the poems of the Earl of Rochester under Charles II were considered quite lascivious. Today, a new book on the slightly pervy poet, John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester: The Poems and “Lucina’s Rape,” edited by Keith Walker and Nicholas Fisher, synthesizes new sources with old and revises information from past biographies.  Conclusion: the Earl seems a little sleazy, no matter what version of history you prefer.

From the Sunday Times:

Members of Rochester’s immediate coterie passed copies to their friends and relatives; copies of those copies then spread through the communities around Whitehall; the Inns of Court, where bright young things pretended to study law; and the coffee houses and theatres of the booming new “town” in the West End. From there, copies found their way out to the universities at Oxford and Cambridge, and finally, enclosed in the newsletters for which country-dwellers were growing ever more avid in Rochester’s lifetime, the poem made it to more far-flung rural localities. At every stage on its journey, the text mutated: lines fell away and substitutes accrued, in-jokes and topical allusions became garbled, obscenities were compounded or cleaned up. Today, several widely differing versions survive. In one, what Nell Gwyn “employs” to rouse the reluctant royal member are her “hands, fingers, mouth and thighs”, in another, her “Mouth, Arms, feet and thighs”, in another, her “Hands, Armes, Fingers, Mouth, and Thighs”, and in another, her “Hands, Armes, fingers, leggs, mouth, Cunt and thighs”.

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Poetry News

Ginsberg’s quadruple espresso

The New York Observer notes that there are 9—yes, 9!—Starbucks within a mile of Ginsberg’s old digs in the East Village (now on the market for $1,700 a month).  Whether to lament the loss of social consciousness in the rapidly gentrifying Village or rejoice at the ease of getting a coffee fix is a personal choice. James Franco loves the ‘Bucks, after all. Just don’t forget Ginsberg’s legacy while sipping that soy sugar-free whatever.

From the Observer:

But the ubiquity of such a commercial chain doesn’t exactly create fertile breeding ground for the “radical political consciousness” that Bruni was already mourning. Regardless, whomever moves into this historic apartment may or may not be able to name you five poems by the previous tenant, but they will absolutely be able to sate their every yearning for a latte. Future inhabitants, when you do buy that grande Frappuccino a block down from this landmark of American letters, pay some respect. Pour a little out for Ginsberg . . .

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Publishing

The graphic novel in purgatory

Illustrator and artist Seymour Chwast has created a graphic novel of Dante’s Divine Comedy. He’s not the first to interpret Dante, but he may well be the second most up-to-date (sorry, Seymour; there is the video game):

Dante plays himself as he travels to the other side with classical poet Virgil. They, and the other characters are depicted in 1930’s dress. I meant Dante to look like a Dashiell Hammett detective, searching for the truth. The Dante character look\s for answers unseeable to mere mortals, by traveling respectively, to Hell, Purgatory and Paradise.

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Poetry News

Who’s afraid of Beowulf?

Not playwright and actor Jason Craig, who—along with theater troupe “Banana, Bag and Bodice”—has revised the Old English poem for the stage, mixing in contemporary references and skewering academic analysis. The Boston Globe reports:

When Beowulf makes his entrance as a bespectacled schlub in a bedraggled costume that suggests he got lost on the way to an Olde Medieval Faire reenactment, while go-go dancing warrior babes purr, “Here he comes, it’s that guy, that guy,’’ in a ’60s doo-wop style, you know this isn’t the “Beowulf’’ of the musty page.

Hey…who said the page was musty?

If Craig doesn’t fear Beowulf, he’s less relaxed about literary criticism–and that discomfort inspires one of the play’s most significant twists:

[Craig] imagined three academics at a panel discussion, who eventually turn into the monsters that Beowulf must battle. He says he was drawn to “the idea of academia possibly destroying its own relationship with a piece of art that they love so much’’ and wanted to mock the scholarly tendency to get mired in minutiae.

Better than getting mired in battle with Grendel.

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Poetry News

There once were some poems about drinkin’

…whose readers asked, what were you thinkin‘?

Over in Seattle, the Stranger hosts a “drunk limerick writing contest.” The selections expose an admirable range of mangled meter, failed rhyme, and unsavory imagery. Below, please find the single entry whose language was clean enough to meet Harriet’s persnickety standards:

The mustachioed man is called Flanigan,
And his friend just got back from the Vatican.
They got loaded drunk,
In the mornin’ they stunk,
And they shouted, “let’s go do THAT again!”

Or…let’s not.

We await the contest results with bated and beery breath.

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Poetry News

Read Eliot. It’s the law.

The Careerist, a blog for lawyers, suggests various tips for summer’s end: Don’t bring your Blackberry to the beach. Have some lobster. And read some poetry. The blogger suggests, in particular, “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,” which she calls “startlingly beautiful,” and summarizes as follows:

In a nutshell, it’s the musings of a middle-aged man who’s trapped in an inglorious life. I think T.S. Eliot might have written it with a lawyer in mind.

And perhaps he wrote it with the end of summer in mind, too:

I shall wear white flannel trousers, and walk upon the beach.
I have heard the mermaids singing, each to each.

Or the end of everything:

We have lingered in the chambers of the sea
By sea-girls wreathed with seaweed red and brown
Till human voices wake us, and we drown.

Happy Labor Day, lawyers!

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Poetry News

Judges announced for “the world’s biggest poetry prize”

The Griffin Trust announced the judges for the 2011 Griffin Poetry Prize yesterday.  The accomplished panel consists of Tim Lilburn, Colm Toíbín, and Chase Twichell, all prize-winning poets and novelists themselves.

Read more about the judges and the prize at the National Post:

Toíbín, a celebrated novelist, teaches at Princeton University, as the Leonard Milberg Lecturer in Irish Letters. The author of six acclaimed novels including The Master, Toíbín has won the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award and has been shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize. He also writes regualrly for the London Review of Books and the New York Review of Books.

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IN THIS ISSUE: September 2010

Poetry Magazine

Poems from Daisy Fried, Geoffrey Hill, Ange Mlinko, David Shapiro, William Logan, Jacob Saenz, Yusef Komunyakaa, Matthew Zapruder, and Wislawa Szymborska; Tony Hoagland on the tribes of poetry and Michael Robbins on Robert Hass.

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Poetry Off the Shelf:
Valerie Martínez & Silvia Curbelo

Poetry Off the Shelf:Valerie Martínez & Silvia Curbelo Wed, September 15th, 6:00 PM
Jazz Showcase
806 South Plymouth Court
Free admission

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