Something to Say: William Carlos Williams on Younger Poets

Cover
New Directions Publishing, 1985 - 280 Seiten
Something to Say: William Carlos Williams on Younger Poets collects all of Williams' known writings--reviews, essays, introductions, and letters to the editor--on the two generations of poets that followed him, from Kenneth Rexroth and Louis Zukofsky to Robert Lowell and Allen Ginsberg. What might have been a random collection of occasional pieces achieves remarkable coherence from the singleness of Williams' poetic vision: his belief that the secret spirit of ritual, of poetry, was trapped in restrictive molds, and, if these could be broken, the spirit would be able to live again in a new, contemporary form. Only a revived clarity and accuracy in sight and expression would enable the modern world to reform social order which Williams saw in complete disarray. To resuscitate American Poetry, Williams concentrated his efforts on the purification of poetic speech--his American idiom--and on remaking the poetic line in a new measure--his variable foot. And while his battles with his contemporaries on these issues could be heated, he was always a nurturing father to the young, "a useful presence," "a model and a liberator." He told Ginsberg to pare down and economize, Roethke to open up, and encouraged Lowell and Levertov to shake off poetic conventions. But in all his emphasis on the poem as a made object of concrete physicality or as a field of action, he would return again and again to this basic advice to young writers: "The only thing necessary is to have something to say when at last the opportunity comes to say it."
 

Inhalt

PREFACE
1
Advice to the Young Poet
39
Advice to a Young Writer
47
The New Poetical Economy George Oppen
55
Comment on James McQuails Pard and
63
An American Poet H H Lewis
75
An Outcry from the Dirt H H Lewis
83
Muriel Rukeysers
89
Letter to the Editors of Partisan Review
109
A Counsel of Madness Kenneth Patchen
115
A Group of Poems by Marcia Nardi
123
An Extraordinary Sensitivity Louis Zukofsky
129
Parker Tylers The Granite Butterfly
139
The Genius of France André Breton
146
Introduction to Byron Vazakas Transfigured Night
155
Montana
249

The Poems of Laura Riding
97
Patchens First Testament
103

Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen

Autoren-Profil (1985)

Besides being a practicing physician, William Carlos Williams (1883-1963) was a poet, short-story writer, novelist, translator, playwright, and essayist whose contribution to the development of modern American poetry grew out of his commitment to recording the "local" experience of Rutherford, New Jersey, and its environs.

Bibliografische Informationen