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Why people need poetry

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I read poetry all the time

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and write about it frequently

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and take poems apart

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to see how they work

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because I'm a word person.

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I understand the world best, most fully,

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in words rather than, say, pictures or numbers,

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and when I have a new experience or a new feeling,

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I'm a little frustrated

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until I can try to put it into words.

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I think I've always been that way.

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I devoured science fiction as a child. I still do.

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And I found poems by Andrew Marvell

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and Matthew Arnold and Emily Dickinson

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and William Butler Yeats

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because they were quoted in science fiction,

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and I loved their sounds

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and I went on to read about ottava rima

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and medial caesuras and enjambment

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and all that other technical stuff

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that you care about if you already care about poems,

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because poems already made me happier

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and sadder and more alive.

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And I became a poetry critic

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because I wanted to know how and why.

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Now, poetry isn't one thing that serves one purpose

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any more than music or computer programming

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serve one purpose.

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The greek word poem, it just means "a made thing,"

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and poetry is a set of techniques,

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ways of making patterns

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that put emotions into words.

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The more techniques you know,

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the more things you can make,

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and the more patterns you can recognize

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in things you might already like or love.

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That said, poetry does seem to be

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especially good at certain things.

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For example, we are all going to die.

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Poetry can help us live with that.

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Poems are made of words, nothing but words.

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The particulars in poems are like

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the particularities, the personalities,

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that distinguish people from one another.

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Poems are easy to share, easy to pass on,

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and when you read a poem, you can imagine

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someone's speaking to you or for you,

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maybe even someone far away

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or someone made up or someone deceased.

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That's why we can go to poems when we want to

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remember something or someone,

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to celebrate or to look beyond death

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or to say goodbye,

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and that's one reason poems can seem important,

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even to people who aren't me,

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who don't so much live in a world of words.

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The poet Frank O'Hara said,

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"If you don't need poetry, bully for you,"

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but he also said when he didn't want to be alive anymore,

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the thought that he wouldn't write any more poems

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had stopped him.

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Poetry helps me want to be alive,

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and I want to show you why by showing you how,

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how a couple of poems react to the fact that

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we're alive in one place at one time in one culture,

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and in another we won't be alive at all.

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So here's one of the first poems I memorized.

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It could address a child or an adult.

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"From far, from eve and morning

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From yon twelve-winded sky,

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The stuff of life to knit me

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Blew hither; here am I.

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Now — for a breath I tarry

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Nor yet disperse apart —

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Take my hand quick and tell me,

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What have you in your heart.

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Speak now, and I will answer;

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How shall I help you, say;

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Ere to the wind's twelve quarters

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I take my endless way."

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[A. E. Housman]

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Now, this poem has appealed

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to science fiction writers.

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It's furnished at least three science fiction titles,

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I think because it says poems can brings us news

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from the future or the past

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or across the world,

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because their patterns can seem to tell you

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what's in somebody's heart.

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It says poems can bring people together temporarily,

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which I think is true,

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and it sticks in my head not just because it rhymes

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but for how it rhymes,

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cleanly and simply on the two and four,

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"say" and "way,"

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with anticipatory hints on the one and three,

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"answer" and "quarters,"

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as if the poem itself were coming together.

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It plays up the fact that we die

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by exaggerating the speed of our lives.

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A few years on Earth become

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one speech, one breath.

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It's a poem about loneliness --

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the "I" in the poem feels no connection will last —

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and it might look like a plea for help

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'til you get to the word "help,"

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where this "I" facing you, taking your hand,

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is more like a teacher or a genie,

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or at least that's what he wants to believe.

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It would not be the first time a poet had

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written the poem that he wanted to hear.

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Now, this next poem really changed

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what I liked and what I read

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and what I felt I could read as an adult.

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It might not make any sense to you

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if you haven't seen it before.

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"The Garden"

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"Oleander: coral

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from lipstick ads in the 50's.

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Fruit of the tree of such knowledge

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To smack (thin air)

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meaning kiss or hit.

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It appears

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in the guise of outworn usages

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because we are bad?

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Big masculine threat,

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insinuating and slangy."

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[Rae Armantrout]

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Now, I found this poem in an anthology

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of almost equally confusing poems in 1989.

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I just heard that there were these scandalous writers

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called Language poets who didn't make any sense,

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and I wanted to go and see for myself what they were like,

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and some of them didn't do much for me,

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but this writer, Rae Armantrout,

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did an awful lot, and I kept reading her

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until I felt I knew what was going on,

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as I do with this poem.

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It's about the Garden of Eden and the Fall

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and the Biblical story of the Fall,

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in which sex as we know it

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and death and guilt

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come into the world at the same time.

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It's also about how appearances deceive,

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how our culture can sweep us along

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into doing and saying things we didn't intend

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or don't like, and Armantrout's style

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is trying to help us stop or slow down.

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"Smack" can mean "kiss" as in air kisses,

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as in lip-smacking,

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but that can lead to "smack" as in "hit"

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as in domestic abuse,

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because sexual attraction can seem threatening.

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The red that means fertility

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can also mean poison.

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Oleander is poisonous.

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And outworn usages like "smack" for "kiss"

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or "hit" can help us see

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how our unacknowledged assumptions

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can make us believe we are bad,

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either because sex is sinful

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or because we tolerate so much sexism.

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We let guys tell women what to do.

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The poem reacts to old lipstick ads,

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and its edginess about statement,

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its reversals and halts, have everything to do

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with resisting the language of ads

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that want to tell us so easily what to want,

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what to do, what to think.

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That resistance is a lot of the point of the poem,

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which shows me, Armantrout shows me

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what it's like to hear grave threats

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and mortal dishonesty in the language

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of everyday life, and once she's done that,

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I think she can show other people, women and men,

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what it's like to feel that way

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and say to other people, women and men

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who feel so alienated or so threatened

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that they're not alone.

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Now, how do I know that I'm right

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about this somewhat confusing poem?

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Well in this case, I emailed the poet a draft of my talk

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and she said, "Yeah, yeah, that's about it."

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Yeah. (Laughter) (Applause)

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But usually, you can't know. You never know.

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You can't be sure, and that's okay.

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All we can do we is listen to poems

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and look at poems and guess

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and see if they can bring us what we need,

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and if you're wrong about some part of a poem,

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nothing bad will happen.

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Now, this next poem is older than Armantrout's,

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but a little younger than A. E. Housman's.

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"The Brave Man"

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"The sun, that brave man,

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Comes through boughs that lie in wait,

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That brave man.

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Green and gloomy eyes

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In dark forms of the grass

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Run away.

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The good stars,

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Pale helms and spiky spurs,

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Run away.

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Fears of my bed,

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Fears of life and fears of death,

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Run away.

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That brave man comes up

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From below and walks without meditation,

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That brave man."

08:57

[Wallace Stevens]

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Now, the sun in this poem,

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in Wallace Stevens' poem, seems so grave

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because the person in the poem is so afraid.

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The sun comes up in the morning through branches,

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dispels the dew, the eyes, on the grass,

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and defeats stars envisioned as armies.

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"Brave" has its old sense of showy

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as well as its modern sense, courage.

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This sun is not afraid to show his face.

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But the person in the poem is afraid.

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He might have been up all night.

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That is the reveal Stevens saves for that fourth stanza,

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where run away has become a refrain.

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This person might want to run away too,

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but fortified by the sun's example,

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he might just rise.

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Stevens saves that sonically odd word "meditation"

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for the end.

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Unlike the sun, human beings think.

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We meditate on past and future, life and death,

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above and below.

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And it can make us afraid.

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Poems, the patterns in poems,

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show us not just what somebody thought

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or what someone did or what happened

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but what it was like to be a person like that,

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to be so anxious, so lonely, so inquisitive,

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so goofy, so preposterous, so brave.

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That's why poems can seem at once so durable,

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so personal, and so ephemeral,

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like something inside and outside you at once.

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The Scottish poet Denise Riley compares poetry

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to a needle, a sliver of outside I cradle inside,

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and the American poet Terrance Hayes

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wrote six poems called "Wind in a Box."

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One of them asks, "Tell me,

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what am I going to do when I'm dead?"

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And the answer is that he'll stay with us

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or won't stay with us inside us as wind,

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as air, as words.

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It is easier than ever to find poems

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that might stay inside you, that might stay with you,

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from long, long ago, or from right this minute,

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from far away or from right close to where you live,

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almost no matter where you live.

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Poems can help you say, help you show how you're feeling,

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but they can also introduce you

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to feelings, ways of being in the world,

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people, very much unlike you,

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maybe even people from long, long ago.

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Some poems even tell you

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that that is what they can do.

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That's what John Keats is doing

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in his most mysterious, perhaps, poem.

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It's mysterious because it's probably unfinished,

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he probably left it unfinished,

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and because it might be meant

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for a character in a play,

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but it might just be Keats' thinking

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about what his own writing,

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his handwriting, could do,

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and in it I hear, at least I hear, mortality,

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and I hear the power of older poetic techniques,

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and I have the feeling, you might have the feeling,

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of meeting even for an instant, almost becoming,

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someone else from long ago,

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someone quite memorable.

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"This living hand, now warm and capable

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Of earnest grasping, would, if it were cold

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And in the icy silence of the tomb,

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So haunt thy days and chill thy dreaming nights

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That thou would wish thine own heart dry of blood

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So in my veins red life might stream again,

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And thou be conscience-calm’d -- see here it is --

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I hold it towards you."

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Thanks.

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