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Category Archives: Poetry

But What’s a Poem?

21 Thursday Jun 2018

Posted by la Clarina in Poetry

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

MOOC, poems, Poetry, teaching

Rant ahead, I warn you. A mild rant – but still.

So I took this MOOC – let’s name no names – about poetry. I don’t write poetry, but I greatly admire the skill of compressing meaning into a limited amount of words, structured and highly shimmering. I’ve always yearned to achieve at least a little of that focused effectiveness… And last year, in the spirit of “you won’t know until you try in earnest”, I’ve decided to stop yearning, and try instead. So I took a MOOC – and liked it a good deal. I’m not saying that I wrote good poetry, mind – but exploring the mechanism was absolutely fascinating. Continue reading →

Yet a While – or, Kit Marlowe’s Art of Fear

07 Thursday Jun 2018

Posted by la Clarina in Poetry, Theatre

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christopher marlowe, Doctor Faustus, Edward II, fear

I think it’s safe to assume that we’ve all begged for one more minute as children: one more minute of play before bedtime, before going to do our homework, before  being given an injection… As though that “one more minute” might somehow change things…

As we grow up, it takes small, everyday forms – such as the “snooze” button of the alarm clock, or lingering a little over a coffee break before that unpleasant meeting, or procrastination in general. Or else, in really bad moments, we revert to that kind of panicked, irrational craving for “one more minute”, just to stave off the bad things a little longer, to keep them away – no matter how little – to not have them happen just yet. Continue reading →

Alexandros, after all

03 Thursday May 2018

Posted by la Clarina in Poetry

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Alexander the Great, Alexandros, favourite poems, Giovanni Pascoli, History, poems

I’ve been musing on first favourite poems – and, after some consideration, I’ve come to the conclusion that my first favourite poem must have been Giovanni Pascoli’s Alexandros. Which is a tad strange because, as a rule, I don’t enormously like Pascoli – a late 19th/early 20th century Italian poet with a rather pathetic vein, only saved, in my admittedly biased view, by a keen interest in history.

Narrative poems, you know. Stories – the usual obsession. Continue reading →

First Favourite Poem

28 Saturday Apr 2018

Posted by la Clarina in Poetry

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Chitra Banerjee, Poetry, Tessa Fontaine

Not quite poetry today – but a lovely article about poetry: finding poetry, and keeping it in one’s life, as happened to Tessa Fontaine. Continue reading →

It Sifts From Leaden Sieves

01 Thursday Mar 2018

Posted by la Clarina in Poetry, Things

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Emily Dickinson, Piotr Ilic Tchaikovsky, Poetry, Snow, the Nutcraker

This is not the post I had in mind for today – but we’re having a true snowfall for the fist time in… oh, I don’t know: years, I rather believe.

It started last night, just as I drove home – which was, if you ask me, absolutely perfect, as far as sentimental fallacy goes – and it’s been snowing through the whole night, and still snowing cats and dogs. Past beautiful, that’s what it is. Continue reading →

Portrait of Unknown Man

22 Thursday Feb 2018

Posted by la Clarina in History, Poetry, Stories

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Shakespeare's Sonnets, the Fair Youth

I’ve always found the idea rather sad: commissioning a portrait, getting a wonder made by the right painter, having it admired and treasured through the centuries, ending in some world-renown gallery… as a masterpiece of the author – with the sitter unknown, and not terribly important, either.

Well, do you know what the saddest portrait of unknown is to me? Not a painting, but a word-portrait: the Fair Youth of the Sonnets… Continue reading →

Let it Snow!

02 Saturday Dec 2017

Posted by la Clarina in Poetry

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

December, Louis MacNeice, Poetry, Snow

No, it isn’t snowing here. I wish… Well, perhaps not right now, tonight being “my” Canterville Ghost’s second first night* – but still.

Not that I have many hopes, actually: it never snows in my corner of the world. It used to, but it almost never does it anymore… I did catch a rather epic snowfall in Bologna a few weeks ago – but right here? It hasn’t happened in years, much less in December – when, by rights, tradition and sentimental fallacy, it should snow cats and dogs. Continue reading →

London!

21 Thursday Sep 2017

Posted by la Clarina in Poetry

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London, Louise Imogen Guiney

A few days of theatre and museums. Not quite without some unease, I confess – but going all the same, because to cancel would feel like a very wrong thing to do…

So… some Shakespeare at the Globe, the Rose, a musical, the Museum of London,  and then we’ll see. Continue reading →

Remembering Seamus

31 Thursday Aug 2017

Posted by la Clarina in Poetry

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Remembered Columns, seamus heaney

It was four years yesterday that Seamus Heaney passed… As is often the case with this sort of anniversaries, it feels like much less and much longer at the same time. Continue reading →

Go and Catch a Falling Star

10 Thursday Aug 2017

Posted by la Clarina in Poetry

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John Donne, Perseids

Because it is Saint Lawrence today – San Lorenzo in my corner of the world – a night to go stargazing, to “catch” Perseids, to recite star-themed poetry…

And I know, John Donne’s Song isn’t exactly star-themed – but I like the string of impossibilities, the playful sense of quest with a falling star on the lid…

Go and catch a falling star,
    Get with child a mandrake root,
Tell me where all past years are,
    Or who cleft the devil’s foot,
Teach me to hear mermaids singing,
Or to keep off envy’s stinging,
            And find
            What wind
Serves to advance an honest mind.
If thou be’st born to strange sights,
    Things invisible to see,
Ride ten thousand days and nights,
    Till age snow white hairs on thee,
Thou, when thou return’st, wilt tell me,
All strange wonders that befell thee,
            And swear,
            No where
Lives a woman true, and fair.
If thou find’st one, let me know,
    Such a pilgrimage were sweet;
Yet do not, I would not go,
    Though at next door we might meet;
Though she were true, when you met her,
And last, till you write your letter,
            Yet she
            Will be
False, ere I come, to two, or three.
Hm, yes. Perhaps I like it better before the last stanza – when it all turns sour and misogynistic… I’m always wary or reading too much autobiography in poems (unless I have to adapt them for the stage), but I think I’d rather imagine Donne writing this after a spat with a woman, rather than out of cold theory. “I’ve written you a song, dearest…”
Ah well, never mind. This is meant to be about the stars, not a poet’s fits of jealous misogyny. Let’s leave out the last stanza and go stargazing, shall we?

Salva

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