Sunday, June 28, 2026

"I do feel poems to involve an occasion to which a man pays obedience, and which intentions alone never yield." (Robert Creeley, QG, p. 54)

The idea here is that the poet has an experience that seems meaningful but this is merely the occasion (an inspiration?) that the poet must now obey in order to make the poem. "That which exists through itself," Creeley quotes Olson, "is what is called meaning."

The philosopher works differently, also confronted by some thing, apparently meaningful, but taking it as an existence, not an inspiration, pursues the occasion to understand it.

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I think I will begin using the blog for notes of my readings now. Something is coming together for SaETItC. It will be nice to have a searchable trail. (Creeley, of course, is to Olson as Davidson is to Quine.)