The Art of Poetry No. 73 (Interviewer)
“It’s not a love of poetry readings that attracts those who do come to them but theater.”
“It’s not a love of poetry readings that attracts those who do come to them but theater.”
You must get drunk. That’s it: your sole imperative. To immunize yourself from the backbreaking, body-bending burdens of time, you must get drunk and stay that way.
After my friend and I left the tobacco shop, he carefully sorted his loose change; slipped some small gold coins in his left jacket pocket; into the right went the silver pieces; in his left pants pocket, a handful of centimes; and in the right, a silver two-franc piece he inspected closely. I wondered about this odd distribution of coins.
In retrospect it was romantic to be the lonely American recovering from
pneumonia, living in a hotel room with a typewriter
and a sink in a Left Bank hotel in a gray Paris winter.
Do you have a favorite time of day? Favorite weather?
Tell me about your writing process.
Is that so? I would never have guessed.
They're calling old people seniors
short for senior citizens but it's as though
they're still in college and can look forward
The first time I met Wittgenstein, I was
late. “The traffic was murder,” I explained.
He spent the next forty-five minutes
No gentle way of breaking the news: you turn on the TV
And see the rocket’s red glare: the capsule explodes,
The astronauts tumble down, and the anchorpeople
I walk into the men’s room at LaGuardia Airport
And the guy standing next to me zipping his fly
Has been dead for thirteen years. I know because
He was one of my professors in graduate school.
The film begins in Venice
As conceived by the dreamer before
He begins his journey, which ends
The question is not how like the animals we are
But how we got that way. We laugh, for what is a suicide note
But the epitaph of an emotion? Few of us die out in the open;
“Work shall set you free:” a sensible sentiment:
Marx would agree: Freud would give his assent:
Yet take those words and put them on a sign
I. In the sixth grade
Eisenhower to go down to South America
And Mrs. Goldman to write on the board,
And then they are there all of the people depressed
Into tattoos or footprints or names plastered
Or carved into wood or wall