twelveoone
ground zero
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2004
- Posts
- 5,882
Some years ago, Rybka was a reviewer of New Poems. One of the best, consistent, qualified. I read his reviews with interest. Not always agreeing, but then if I do agree 100% of the time, I lose what is that most valuable of assets, another view. Poetry is a game of choices, after the first word the second, what is thr second word doing with the first and so on. even the articles have weight, do I drop this "the' because it will no longer be an iamb, etc. Even in a what looks a rather pedestrian piece, there might be something in the choice of words, something you did not see, in a profusion of possibilies it is easy not to see what is front or you. Critics (and I'm sure some of you remember that effort here to make it a bad name) offer that valuble asset, another view.
Rybka was a critic.
Rybka was a writer. I am a writer. Frankly we had a love/hate relationship concerning each others work. This may be the best kind of relationship to have, one minute you are asking yourself "what the fuck is he doing?" and the next, you see, and steal, I'm sorry, are influenced by. I know I influenced him, I hope he at least suspected, he infleunced me. He caused me to take another look at e.e cummings, discovering something not only about e.e.(he's a genius) but also about Rybka (the same sense of playfullness and use of white space) but also about myself (that I'm an asshole for overlooking cummings so long because of my prejudice of all lower case words.)
Rybka did one thing in his work, that annoyed the hell out of me, what I consider excessive alliteration. But I'm always willing to reevaluate.
This was written not as a tribute, that may be beyond my talents. I took care in editting so it would not seem as either a parady or game of oneupsmanship, that is a game for the living, as they would have the chance to top it. It is something I started to write after I got the news of his passing. I had taken two rather long walks, and many subsequent retracings of the path I took, for the dead become lost to the living, unless you are alone. And this is a poem about being alone, the influence of a contemporary, and a coming to terms that I like he will never reach where we want to ne
Anything good about this poem, particularly the alliteration, I credit to his influence. Anything bad (and I'm sure Rybka, with some relish.would have pointed it out) is mine.
I owe him this.
Pax
The Blue Hour
For Rybka
worthy of my undying regard - Joseph Conrad
Between twin dead branches, the blue dusk of the sky
drew down deserted streets, silent at dinnertime;
leaves breezeless still on trees, gift of persistant high.
I walked in twilit thought. Passed the plaster Marys-
Our Ladies of mown lawns - O virgin blue, pure, sublime.
Their painted fleshtone faces face green eternities.
The blue hour mutes the hues, goes into indigo,
lined lead plum coloured clouds glean the serene autumnal gloam,
through black boughs streetlights shown, and in a ring arose
to song of dry leaves sung, shadows in vertigo.
Realize I- I- we who twist towards home,
white ghosts of memory, a cast coast in lost clothes,
past that shadow circle where, in danse, my soul lies.
Then I, still ship adrift, I crossed the shadow line.
Rybka was a critic.
Rybka was a writer. I am a writer. Frankly we had a love/hate relationship concerning each others work. This may be the best kind of relationship to have, one minute you are asking yourself "what the fuck is he doing?" and the next, you see, and steal, I'm sorry, are influenced by. I know I influenced him, I hope he at least suspected, he infleunced me. He caused me to take another look at e.e cummings, discovering something not only about e.e.(he's a genius) but also about Rybka (the same sense of playfullness and use of white space) but also about myself (that I'm an asshole for overlooking cummings so long because of my prejudice of all lower case words.)
Rybka did one thing in his work, that annoyed the hell out of me, what I consider excessive alliteration. But I'm always willing to reevaluate.
This was written not as a tribute, that may be beyond my talents. I took care in editting so it would not seem as either a parady or game of oneupsmanship, that is a game for the living, as they would have the chance to top it. It is something I started to write after I got the news of his passing. I had taken two rather long walks, and many subsequent retracings of the path I took, for the dead become lost to the living, unless you are alone. And this is a poem about being alone, the influence of a contemporary, and a coming to terms that I like he will never reach where we want to ne
Anything good about this poem, particularly the alliteration, I credit to his influence. Anything bad (and I'm sure Rybka, with some relish.would have pointed it out) is mine.
I owe him this.
Pax
The Blue Hour
For Rybka
worthy of my undying regard - Joseph Conrad
Between twin dead branches, the blue dusk of the sky
drew down deserted streets, silent at dinnertime;
leaves breezeless still on trees, gift of persistant high.
I walked in twilit thought. Passed the plaster Marys-
Our Ladies of mown lawns - O virgin blue, pure, sublime.
Their painted fleshtone faces face green eternities.
The blue hour mutes the hues, goes into indigo,
lined lead plum coloured clouds glean the serene autumnal gloam,
through black boughs streetlights shown, and in a ring arose
to song of dry leaves sung, shadows in vertigo.
Realize I- I- we who twist towards home,
white ghosts of memory, a cast coast in lost clothes,
past that shadow circle where, in danse, my soul lies.
Then I, still ship adrift, I crossed the shadow line.