A Crestomathy of Crescendos

From prose pieces published in Poetry, July/August 2023:

Douglas Kearney, “On Spite: Folly Comes Daily

… Kit, who pokes at poetry with a long sharp stick to make certain it’s dead before skulking past it…

***

Elisa Gabbert, “On Self-Pity: Go Eat Worms

Children love screaming when nothing is wrong because something has been wrong, something will be wrong — don’t worry about timing, just get your catharsis in when you can.

***

Wayne Koestenbaum, “On Panic: Whose Woods These Are I Think I Know

Today is Valentine’s Day. Time to hand me an “O thou” — the kiss of apostrophe, the grope of the vocative.

Poetry leads to panic because you must ferret out the secret story behind the words… What if metaphor skein blocks your fingery entrance?

Suspension of certainty — I think I know, but I don’t really know if I know — produces epistemological ecstasy, if you’re built to enjoy not knowing.

If I dislike panic, then I’m exiled from poetry, whose founding ploy is the propagation of fear.

(c) 2023 JMN — EthicalDative. All rights reserved

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About JMN

I live in Texas and devote much of my time to easel painting on an amateur basis. I stream a lot of music, mostly jazz, throughout the day. I like to read and memorize poetry.
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6 Responses to A Crestomathy of Crescendos

  1. christinenovalarue's avatar christinenovalarue says:

    🤍

    Like

  2. I especially like the Elisa Gabbert quote – it perfectly explains why children love screaming! Nice post Jim.

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    • Oh and I just had to look up the meaning of ‘crestomathy’ – a new one to me!!

      Liked by 1 person

      • JMN's avatar JMN says:

        Well done! Full disclosure: I looked it up myself to be sure I was using it properly. As a language student, I encountered the word mostly in Spanish and French. I knew there would be an English cognate, but it’s not much used in English, I think. In Spanish: Crestomatía.

        Liked by 1 person

  3. Pearls. Thanks for sharing them

    Liked by 1 person

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