Clichérie
The other night at the Denali show, when my former student was talking to me about poetry, I tried to explain my undergraduate theory that it would be possible to write a great body of work solely by inverting the clichés of other writers. I explained all the work I'd done on Rilke and how he often seemed to be taking that approach, particularly in the New Poems.
In the course of the discussion, I thought of a little formulation:
In the course of the discussion, I thought of a little formulation:
I would love to become a cliché, but I don't want to be a cliché!It's silly and obvious, to be sure, but still captures the basic philosophical distinction between being and becoming quite nicely. What do you do once you've arrived?
Delay
Around 4am, the baseball-scoreboard-type, non-digital train destination sign swung over to reveal the message, "20 Minuten Verspätung," instead of announcing the arrival of the expected train. I thought, "Whatever." But the other three people on the platform were enraged.
Germans apparently believe that if they leave on time, they'll have a better chance of making it to that place in the sun.
I've always loved Bruce's ability to capture that strange nostalgia for a future that will never come that constitutes the Utopian side of our daily lives.
He's also good at dealing with clichés, as evidenced by the song "Local Hero."