J.S. ABSHER
  • Home
  • Books
    • The Burial of Anyce Shepherd
    • Night Weather
    • Mouth Work
    • Love Letters of a Mississippi Lawyer
    • Buy Burial of Anyce Shepherd
    • Buy Night Weather
  • Poetry
    • Weeding
    • Winter Beeches
    • Traveling Inside My Room
    • Selected Poems in Magazines & Journals
  • Projects
    • My Own Life
    • “Pluck Enough”: The Winston-Salem Riot of 1895
    • Life Stories
  • Events
  • Blog
  • About
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Books
    • The Burial of Anyce Shepherd
    • Night Weather
    • Mouth Work
    • Love Letters of a Mississippi Lawyer
    • Buy Burial of Anyce Shepherd
    • Buy Night Weather
  • Poetry
    • Weeding
    • Winter Beeches
    • Traveling Inside My Room
    • Selected Poems in Magazines & Journals
  • Projects
    • My Own Life
    • “Pluck Enough”: The Winston-Salem Riot of 1895
    • Life Stories
  • Events
  • Blog
  • About
  • Contact

Strange Arts & Visual Delights

A Blog

The Clothes of My Name

4/24/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture
For years,  I've been collecting quotations that catch my eye or ear. Here's a set of roughly related thoughts on style and matter. The flowers were on our now demolished deck. 

The fool is disturbed not when we tell him his ideas are false, but when we suggest they have gone out of style.--Nicolas Gomez Davila
 
Those who yield and adopt the style of the moment are killed the moment after.—Roberto Calasso, The Ruin of Kasch
 
The only books that matter are those of which it could be said that their author would have suffocated had he not written them.—Julian Green
 
The weight of our craft stays the same: / To change time into a stanza, / To concentrate fear into meaning.—Tomas Venclova
 
The greater the probability of a symbol's occurrence in any given situation, the smaller will be its information content. – E.H. Gombrich
 
Where we can anticipate we need not listen. – E.H. Gombrich, "Art and Illusion"
 
Today … the range of possible poetic attitudes often excludes such opportunities for satire, argument, and moral opinion as … seen in … [Wordsworth's "Great men have been among us," Shakespeare’s Sonnet 110, and Goldsmith's riff on David Garrick in "Retaliation"], favoring instead detailed particulars of person and setting, confessionalism, and the anti-intellectual role of seeming sincere. These preferences leave out formality and the play of rhetoric, especially any rhetoric with heroic content, as in Wordsworth’s poem.  But also in Shakespeare’s 110th sonnet we witness a willingness to explore extremes not of experience only but even of culpability; it is this possibility of guilt that is even further antipathetic to most late-20th-century poets’ threshold of self-esteem.—Mary Kinzie, A Poet's Guide to Poetry.
 
In the 10th century, when the Kievan knights entered Haggia Sophia...they did not know if there were still on earth or... in heaven.—Czesław Miłosz
 
[In poetry] straining comes to nothing, for we receive the gift whether we are deserving of it or not.—Czesław Miłosz, Milosz's ABCs, “Ambition.”
 
Horror is the law of the world of living creatures, and civilization is concerned with masking that truth.—Czesław Miłosz
 
In the very essence of poetry there is something indecent: / a thing is brought forth which we didn't know we had in us.—Czesław Miłosz
 
The clothes of my name fall away and disappear.—Czesław Miłosz
0 Comments

    Author

    Write something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview.

    Archives

    November 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.