Compass. Jorge Luis Borges. I knew Borges as a short story writer before I discovered he wrote poetry also. His short stories are excersises in applied metaphysics: he often starts with an idea, an abstract one dealing with tenous entities or concepts, such as time, eternity, infinity, alternate grammars and philosophies, paradoxes and universal symbols. And then with almost mathematical rigour delineates a concrete world where these ideas and concepts exert a shaping power almost akin to fate. As if fate wore many masks, and was given over to playing games. His most famous short story is perhaps Tlon, Uqbar, Obis Tertius, which tells of an enormous enterprise undertaken by a secret society of scientists, philosophers, engineers, theologians, linguists, etc, to write a multi volume encyclopaedia of an imaginary planet, detailing its history, its peoples, differing cultures, languages, plants, animals, religions…The encyclopaedia is released gradually, and its seduction is such that its contents soon come to supplant reality itself, which is remade in the image of the encyclopaedia. Borges is fond of the conceit that reality is somewhere written. In a library we may not have access to, or which may be the universe itself in an unintelligble language. Unintelligible…to us. His poetry is likewise preoccupied with the ramifications of ideas, and I think he is at his best in a form which matched and answered to his need for precision: the sonnet. Artifacts and the figures of various craftsmen appear regularly in his poems, as if he himself acknowledged an affinity with these in his own poetic procedures. He’s like a watchmaker, but it is not simply time he wishes to record, but riddles, labyrinths, mirrors, days and eternity, the mystery of being. These are all intellectual puzzles that he tries to engineer into these marvellous devices in an attempt to observe their inner workings, perhaps to break their code. Very often, however, his sonnets end by indicating something beyond themselves, something supra-rational. It is a maneouvre that abdicates to a greater mystery, and one that he made more frequently with advancing years. I don’t think he would have agreed with Bertrand Russell, who asserted that the world is simply ‘brute fact’. Like Milosz, he craved a day of comprehension.
(Compass)
Posts Tagged ‘poem’
Compass, Borges
Posted by Eckhart's Dog Woof! Woof! on February 26, 2010
Posted in Poetry Anthology | Tagged: borges, poem | Leave a Comment »
And Owl, Foxhunt, Ted Hughes
Posted by Eckhart's Dog Woof! Woof! on February 23, 2010

Ted Hughes is responsible for introducing many of the major east European poets to a British audience via the journal, Modern Poetry in Translation, which he editted alongside Daniel Weissbort. Hughes translated many of these poets himself, with assistance from someone fluent in the original language. And in the process was exposed to trends outwith the Anglo-American and the Modernist traditions. Hughes’ attitude towards ‘literature’, as an established canon, a semiotic game or code the rules of which need to be learned, is one of wary ambivalence. He attended Cambridge on a scholarship, initially to study English, but afterwards changing to the study of Amthropology, having been warned by his ‘muse’ in a dream that his academic studies in literature were killing the centres of his own creativity. As Hughes recounts it, he fell asleep at his desk over an essay on a topic in English literature when, in his dream, the door to his room swung open and a figure with the head of a fox entered, and left a bloody hand (not paw) print impressed on his essay. ‘Stop this – you are destroying us’, the figure intoned, before turning to leave. Hughes took the hint, and changed his studies to Anthropology and Archaeology. He did not like literary or academic poetry, or the likes of which have been nurtered in academic houthouses. He preferred a poetry that engaged more directly with life. He described Shakespeare’s language, for example, as an emergency construct assembled out of any and all sources at his, Shakespeare’s, disposal, in the face of a spiritual crisis. It was not merely stage entertainment. Likewise he found in that generation of East European poets marked by World War 2 a sense of crisis that stripped their poetry of the inessential, and rendered literary embellishment and ornamentation vividly inadequate. Intially, Hughes engaged the natural world directly, and there are good grounds for arguing that he is the greatest nature poet in the English Language. But he was carried far beyond this initial starting point when he encountered the likes of Pilinsky, Holan, Popa. His mature style takes lessons learned from these poets, and fuses them with more primordial sources drawn from his studies in Antropolgy. And underlying all of this is a deep engagement with Shakespeare and an almost Elizabethan sense of the English Language as something not yet entirely settled into it’s groove but pressured by the need to improvise at a moment’s notice. Having said all this, it might be worthwhile quoting two of his poems, the first, ‘And Owl’, showing influences from the Eastern Europeans, and Anthropological sources in mythology and folktale, and the second, ‘Foxhunt’, an example of that ‘immediacy testing’ that he often subjected language to, to see if it was equal to the task.
Posted in Poetry Anthology | Tagged: elizabethan, hughes, nature, poem, shakespeare | Leave a Comment »
Wolf Eyes, Vasko Popa
Posted by Eckhart's Dog Woof! Woof! on February 20, 2010

Vasko Popa was a Serbian poet born in 1922. He studied philosophy at Belgrade University, and at the universities of Bucharest, and Vienna. He was well-read in many subjects, including Alchemy and Serbian folklore. His poems often have the feel of primitive song, imbued with dream elements and folk symbolism. He learned from the Surealists, but surpassed them in depth of structure and in the deliberate cross-referencing and deep interconnectedness of his poems and their symbols and allusions. He wrote in sequences, and though each poem of his can stand alone, its real place is in the sequence, and each sequence is part of a greater organic whole. He didn’t just write poems: he produced a coordinated body of work. The danger in this enterprise would gave been obscurity, a semi-private code of cross referencing that would have discouraged entry into his work. Yet his poems are marvelously simple, open, and meaningful on a level that is direct, like folktale, or tribal song. Perhaps his greatest work is Earth Erect, which draws from Serbian history, and the life of Saint Sava, patron saint of Serbia. But I thought I’d choose from a volume called Raw Flesh, which takes as it’s foreground subject matter the here and now of the town of Vrsac, though its inhabitants cast longer shadows than normal. Wolf Eyes I like because of its quiet determination to be equal to whatever may come along, by drawing on deeper resources. It’s significant that Popa fought as a Partisan during World War 2, and was imprisoned for a while in Beckerek Prison.
(Wolf Eyed)
Posted in Poetry Anthology | Tagged: east european, folklore, poem, postwar | Leave a Comment »