Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Captives

A poem is always written by one captive to another.

The aim of the poem is to establish first for the poet and then for the reader a free relationship to the emotion, to liberate the subject from the feeling it implies. The poem must extricate itself, its poet, and its reader, from the history in which they are all implicated.

A poem makes an art of our captivity.

We should not expect poems to free us from political oppression, nor even from personal obsession. These will remain even after we read or write a poem. But the poem will provide us with a moment in which the nature of our oppression or obsession is available to us as an opportunity.*

Ultimately, we are all the captives of our emotions.

___________
Update (15-01-2014, 10:38): The last word in this paragraph has been changed, on a whim. From "emotion" to "opportunity". That totally changes the meaning, but seems more right, and less trivial.

4 comments:

Andrew Shields said...

The captives pass "inspired notes" to each other.

http://andrewjshields.blogspot.ch/2007/11/inspired-notes.html

(Apologies if I have linked to that already on your blog. It's a touchstone of mine.)

Thomas said...

No apology necessary. Last time it led to an interesting discussion.

malin christin said...

So true. Reminds me of something I read by Thoreau, I think it was, a long time ago. Can't find it anywhere now, but it went something like "a good book teaches me to get up from my chair and act". Which really should be the true purpose of art

Thomas said...

Ezra Pound: "Properly, we shd. read for power. Man reading shd. be man intensely alive. The book shd. be a ball of light in one's hand." (Guide to Kulchur, p. 55)