Saturday, December 03, 2005
Wednesday, October 19, 2005
Name Change
Hello loyal readers, all none of you.
I want to let everyone know that I will no longer be publishing under the name Gunther Quinte but will instead use my intials, like so: GM Quinte or G.M. Quinte.
Someone informed me recently that my name, pronounced "American-style," sounds an awful lot like the name Kunta Kinte.
It's hard enough to avoid confusion in the poems. I want to avoid it with my name. For those of you who know me personally, of course, I'm still going to go by Gunther, or Gun. Nobody wants to say "Hey GM, how are you enjoying your steak dinner?" That sounds very pretentious.
FYI, Kunta Kinte was played in the film Roots by the German-born actor LRM Burton, Jr. (pictured here as the Homerically blind Jordy LaForge).
I want to let everyone know that I will no longer be publishing under the name Gunther Quinte but will instead use my intials, like so: GM Quinte or G.M. Quinte.
Someone informed me recently that my name, pronounced "American-style," sounds an awful lot like the name Kunta Kinte.
It's hard enough to avoid confusion in the poems. I want to avoid it with my name. For those of you who know me personally, of course, I'm still going to go by Gunther, or Gun. Nobody wants to say "Hey GM, how are you enjoying your steak dinner?" That sounds very pretentious.
FYI, Kunta Kinte was played in the film Roots by the German-born actor LRM Burton, Jr. (pictured here as the Homerically blind Jordy LaForge).
Thursday, August 18, 2005
Tuesday, August 16, 2005
Monday, August 01, 2005
Lagging Strands
Sorry, unfaithful readers, for my lack of posts. I've been hard at work revising my poems, and cleaning my cousin's pool. He recently fired his pool man, who used to come twice a week, because he discovered some algae on the underside of the thermal cover. Now I must contend with pH values and chlorine levels and leaf-catching. In the meanwhile, and in the memory of blog-dead but still-living Eduardo Corral, I ask you to vote on my new manuscript title:
The Kites of Hell
Colossus
Magic Anatomy
Cerificates and Receipts
or
None of the Above
xo
Gun
The Kites of Hell
Colossus
Magic Anatomy
Cerificates and Receipts
or
None of the Above
xo
Gun
Friday, June 03, 2005
Saturday, May 14, 2005
Hermit
My cousin has gone to new york for some kind of television conference, and so I am no longer required to awake at normal hours, etc. I will be entering a mental hermitage for the next two weeks. Think good thoughts for me. My writing conference of one, we hope, will yield at least one lightning bolt. I limp along opaquely...
Monday, May 02, 2005
Wednesday, April 13, 2005
Calumny 2005
“What is lacking cannot be numbered.”
Make of the fog a horn,
of the dermis an umiak,
of the sparrow-feet
(Arms,
spoons,
grapes,
gabion legs.)
a wall-eyed cat.
A ball of sea glass
penetrates the grass.
This meal feels like a marathon, sister.
(Timbers of our trestle,
a handful of indifferent filings,
your peasants asleep
in the dampening culvert.)
Dragoman
hold my hand.
Make of the fog a horn,
of the dermis an umiak,
of the sparrow-feet
(Arms,
spoons,
grapes,
gabion legs.)
a wall-eyed cat.
A ball of sea glass
penetrates the grass.
This meal feels like a marathon, sister.
(Timbers of our trestle,
a handful of indifferent filings,
your peasants asleep
in the dampening culvert.)
Dragoman
hold my hand.
Wednesday, March 30, 2005
Robert Creely (1926-2005)
[Below from Donald Factor, via a MeFi thread]
In the early sixties I edited a magazine called Nomad. We did a manifesto issue and this was Creeley's contribution:
A NOTE
Robert Creeley
I believe in a poetry determined by the language of which it is made. (Williams: 'Therefore each speech having its own character the poetry it engenders will be peculiar to that speech also in its own intrinsic form.') I look to words, and nothing else, for my own redemption either as man or poet. Pound, early in the century, teaches the tradition of. man-standing-by-his-word,' the problem of sincerity, which is never as simple as it may be made to seem. The poet, of all men, has least cause and least excuse to pervert his language, since what he markets is so little in demand. He must find his living elsewhere. His aim must never be deflected by anterior commitment, even to those whom he loves. Words cannot serve responsibly as an apology for those who may wish to make them one.
I mean then words - as opposed to content. I care what the poem says, only as a poem - I am no longer interested in the exterior attitude to which the poem may well point, as sign-board. That concern I have found it best to settle elsewhere. I will not be misled by the. niceness, of any sentiment, or its converse, malevolence. I do not think a poet is necessarily a nice man. I think the poem's morality is contained as a term of its structure, and is there to be determined and nowhere else. (Pound: 'Prosody is the total articulation of the sound in a poem.') Only craft determines the morality of a poem.
Louis Zukofsky offers. A Test Of Poetry' as. the range of pleasure it affords as sight, sound, and intellection.' I am pleased by that poem which makes use of myself and my intelligence, as a partner to its declaration. It does not matter what I am told - it matters, very much, how I am there used. Our world has been so delivered to the perversion of language ( the word qua trick or persuader) that my own soul, such as I know it, comes to life in whatever clarities are offered to it. Poems allow me to go on living, and I am grateful for my life.
In the early sixties I edited a magazine called Nomad. We did a manifesto issue and this was Creeley's contribution:
A NOTE
Robert Creeley
I believe in a poetry determined by the language of which it is made. (Williams: 'Therefore each speech having its own character the poetry it engenders will be peculiar to that speech also in its own intrinsic form.') I look to words, and nothing else, for my own redemption either as man or poet. Pound, early in the century, teaches the tradition of. man-standing-by-his-word,' the problem of sincerity, which is never as simple as it may be made to seem. The poet, of all men, has least cause and least excuse to pervert his language, since what he markets is so little in demand. He must find his living elsewhere. His aim must never be deflected by anterior commitment, even to those whom he loves. Words cannot serve responsibly as an apology for those who may wish to make them one.
I mean then words - as opposed to content. I care what the poem says, only as a poem - I am no longer interested in the exterior attitude to which the poem may well point, as sign-board. That concern I have found it best to settle elsewhere. I will not be misled by the. niceness, of any sentiment, or its converse, malevolence. I do not think a poet is necessarily a nice man. I think the poem's morality is contained as a term of its structure, and is there to be determined and nowhere else. (Pound: 'Prosody is the total articulation of the sound in a poem.') Only craft determines the morality of a poem.
Louis Zukofsky offers. A Test Of Poetry' as. the range of pleasure it affords as sight, sound, and intellection.' I am pleased by that poem which makes use of myself and my intelligence, as a partner to its declaration. It does not matter what I am told - it matters, very much, how I am there used. Our world has been so delivered to the perversion of language ( the word qua trick or persuader) that my own soul, such as I know it, comes to life in whatever clarities are offered to it. Poems allow me to go on living, and I am grateful for my life.
Tuesday, March 22, 2005
Friday, March 18, 2005
Missing Rudolph Lope
Has it really been over a year since Mr. Lope posted this assessment on his now-defunct blog? if only I had more readers like him. If only someone were even reading my blog. Ah, but it's the illusion of audience that keeps us hitting "print" or "publish", isn't it?
The Poetry of Gunther Quinte
I believe it is time now to consider the work of Gunther Quinte, a poet who, though popular on the continent, has failed to garner the attention he deserves here in the United States. I first became aware of Mr. Quinte's poetry somewhat recently when C.P. Galom urged me to consult the man's website. I was shocked, not only by the explosive originality of the verse, but by the seeming anonymity of the poet. At a recent Doe Library reading here in Berkeley, I asked several of my colleagues what they thought of Gunther Quinte's latest book (Tub Math) and was met with nothing but puzzled stares. It is my hope that, with this essay, this horrifying lacuna in the American poetic sensibility may, at last, be filled.
Though a proper introduction to Mr. Quinte's work would begin with a discussion of his first book, the brilliant, post-avant masterpiece, Poems in the Way of Experience, I shall begin instead with his most recent, and to my mind, most accomplished work, Tub Math. Tub Math's poems seethe with the experimental energy of Quinte's Crony Award-winning second book Burn Outs; but temper their experimentation with a considered, phenomenological investigation of poetic being. Consider, for example, the first lines of "Plumage Rock," perhaps the book's most arresting piece:
The organic inspector came by, itching
to certify our day. I exhaled smoke.
Ignoring for the moment the clearly Messianic figure of the "organic inspector" and the terrifying exhalation of smoke (could this be the smokey belch of Cacus, burrowed in his lair?), I am moved, even now, to swoon by the simple lyricism of these lines...
The Poetry of Gunther Quinte
I believe it is time now to consider the work of Gunther Quinte, a poet who, though popular on the continent, has failed to garner the attention he deserves here in the United States. I first became aware of Mr. Quinte's poetry somewhat recently when C.P. Galom urged me to consult the man's website. I was shocked, not only by the explosive originality of the verse, but by the seeming anonymity of the poet. At a recent Doe Library reading here in Berkeley, I asked several of my colleagues what they thought of Gunther Quinte's latest book (Tub Math) and was met with nothing but puzzled stares. It is my hope that, with this essay, this horrifying lacuna in the American poetic sensibility may, at last, be filled.
Though a proper introduction to Mr. Quinte's work would begin with a discussion of his first book, the brilliant, post-avant masterpiece, Poems in the Way of Experience, I shall begin instead with his most recent, and to my mind, most accomplished work, Tub Math. Tub Math's poems seethe with the experimental energy of Quinte's Crony Award-winning second book Burn Outs; but temper their experimentation with a considered, phenomenological investigation of poetic being. Consider, for example, the first lines of "Plumage Rock," perhaps the book's most arresting piece:
The organic inspector came by, itching
to certify our day. I exhaled smoke.
Ignoring for the moment the clearly Messianic figure of the "organic inspector" and the terrifying exhalation of smoke (could this be the smokey belch of Cacus, burrowed in his lair?), I am moved, even now, to swoon by the simple lyricism of these lines...
Here Comes Stephanie Strickland
7. How would you explain what a poem is to my seven year old?
Poems are words that take you through three kinds of doors: closed doors, secret doors, and doors you don’t know are there.
From the latest Here Comes Everybody.
With great links to Stephanie Strickland's online work.
Poems are words that take you through three kinds of doors: closed doors, secret doors, and doors you don’t know are there.
From the latest Here Comes Everybody.
With great links to Stephanie Strickland's online work.
Tuesday, March 08, 2005
Flakes
"Turns out the pink stuff was a shrimp."
Tears before the verdict,
All this talk about relaxing.
Clusters of bird watchers,
Svengali tailor.
It took only the afternoon to readjust.
He who steals the honey,
He who dreams of footprints.
A live auction? Disgusting.
Tears before the verdict,
All this talk about relaxing.
Clusters of bird watchers,
Svengali tailor.
It took only the afternoon to readjust.
He who steals the honey,
He who dreams of footprints.
A live auction? Disgusting.
Friday, March 04, 2005
It's a trick that'll kill a guy
INTERVIEWER
What are you trying to show?
CELINE
Emotion. Savy, the biologist, said something appropriate: In the beginning there was emotion, and the verb wasn’t there at all. When you tickle an amoeba she withdraws, she has emotion, she doesn’t speak but she does have emotion. A baby cries, a horse gallops. Only us, they’ve given us the verb. That gives you the politician, the writer, the prophet. The verb’s horrible. You can’t smell it. But to get to the point where you can translate this emotion, that’s a difficulty no one imagines. . . . It’s ugly. . . . It’s superhuman. . . . It’s a trick that’ll kill a guy.
From the Paris Review's Writers at Work #3
What are you trying to show?
CELINE
Emotion. Savy, the biologist, said something appropriate: In the beginning there was emotion, and the verb wasn’t there at all. When you tickle an amoeba she withdraws, she has emotion, she doesn’t speak but she does have emotion. A baby cries, a horse gallops. Only us, they’ve given us the verb. That gives you the politician, the writer, the prophet. The verb’s horrible. You can’t smell it. But to get to the point where you can translate this emotion, that’s a difficulty no one imagines. . . . It’s ugly. . . . It’s superhuman. . . . It’s a trick that’ll kill a guy.
From the Paris Review's Writers at Work #3
Friday, January 14, 2005
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