Meanwhile, Up North
There is a city workers' strike in Toronto, so no garbage collection. Photograph from the enchanting and excellent image maker, Sam Javanrouh of Top Left Pixel.
'Everyone mistakes the limit of their mind for the limits of the world'
4 They say unto him, "Master, this woman was taken in adultery, in the very act.5 ...what sayest thou?"
6 This they said, tempting him... But Jesus stooped down, and with his finger wrote on the ground, as though he heard them not.
7 So when they continued asking him, he lifted up himself, and said unto them, "He that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her..."
September's BaccalaureateIt has been years since I first sparked a discussion about the crucial differences between creating on paper with a pen or pencil, and on a computer screen with a keyboard.
A combination is
Of Crickets--Crows--and Retrospects
And a dissembling Breeze
That hints without assuming--
An Innuendo sear
That makes the Heart put up its Fun
And turn Philosopher.
The widespread use of computer and digital media is transforming not only how poets compose their work but also how they preserve it, or fail to...More of Stein's essay here.
[The contemporary] decision to forgo the handwritten and typewriter stages sends ripples through the creative process. One result is that the poem coming into being has no actual physical reality. There's nothing penciled on paper, nothing inked blotched and held up to the sun. Nothing to read, write on, curse, crumple, and toss across the room. Now, the poem is merely digital code splayed across a glowing screen, and its reality is perilously momentary. Until the poet clicks "save," the poem does not possess a lasting (if purely digitalized) form.
From 1944 on, Larkin, setting up shop as a postgraduate writer, preserved and dated his handwritten drafts, as they moved toward typed, corrected, and final versions... the eight-line poem “Take One Home for the Kiddies,” [...] was begun in April of 1954 and completed in August of 1960... “The Whitsun Weddings,” begun in May 1957 with its first stanza complete, was then dropped, resumed in July 1958, reworked for twenty-three pages until 6 September, picked up again on 19 September and completed after eight further pages of drafts on 18 October — New Yorker, July 26, 2004What else is revealed, if pages of drafts and redrafts are preserved? In the case of Larkin, there are scores of unfinished poems which never saw publication, as the poet, in his final decade, found it increasingly difficult and then impossible, to create poetry. Therein, one can perhaps even glimpse whatever it was that worked against the muse, or what stumblingblock in the mind prevented the poetry from flowing and forming as once it did...