KPFA - Cover to Cover with Jack Foley

KPFA

A celebration of the art of poetry. A well-known poet himself, Jack Foley’s considerable historical knowledge and his awareness of the current “scene” are incorporated into his radio shows and have made them a kaleidoscopic, always stimulating attraction for anyone interested in poetry.

  1. KPFA’S 71ST BIRTHDAY POEM

    04/15/2020

    KPFA’S 71ST BIRTHDAY POEM

    My mind returns always to poetry Not as a task but as a blessed relief It is the spontaneous, generous gift, “grace,” “Free, and totally unexpected, and Undeserved.” Someone remarked About Flannery O’Connor’s characters That they were all seeking grace But grace, like poetry, cannot be sought My mind returns to poetry Not as a task and certainly not as a job But as a sudden, spontaneous, often surprising Lifting of consciousness, a blessing surely, Like the moment when your sins are entirely forgiven Or the moment when you understand That the person looking at you Loves you entirely and without reserve And would, if it were possible, take on your death. “Poetry,” wrote W.H. Auden, famously, “Makes nothing happen,” but I think this is wrong. Poetry IS the happening, the chance encounter with the angel, The sudden blessedness. It announces itself as a “feeling,” A piece of “music” in the mind That tells you, “Now is the time.” It does not transform the world like a program to end unemployment Or a vaccine that will cure coronavirus, It transforms YOU–you become a beacon, a light, The sudden, submissive vehicle of a consciousness That holds you and forces you, often reluctantly, To stand unalterably in its shining. Today is the birthday of KPFA-FM. It is 71, nine years younger than I, Though I have been broadcasting on it since 1988. For more years than most people have been alive KPFA has honored not only the political, The transformation of the world, But the transformation that occurs within the listener, The transformation that comes with the infusion of words and ideas. Echoing Cocteau, Jack Spicer said the poet Was a radio. The device becomes the person When your ears are tuned to a channel of endless, eloquent hope.   HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO A COMMUNITY RADIO STATION OF VERY LONG STANDING     The post KPFA’S 71ST BIRTHDAY POEM appeared first on KPFA.

  2. 01/15/2020

    Cover to Cover with Jack Foley – January 15, 2020

    Jack looked into his files and discovered a show with the late, wonderful Carolyn Kizer. It aired in 1996. Wikipedia: Carolyn Ashley Kizer (December 10, 1925 – October 9, 2014) was an American poet of the Pacific Northwest whose works reflect her feminism. She won the Pulitzer Prize in 1985. According to an article at the Center for the Study of the Pacific Northwest, “Kizer reach[ed] into mythology in poems like ‘Semele Recycled”; into politics, into feminism, especially in her series of poems called “Pro Femina”; into science, the natural world, music, and translations and commentaries on Japanese and Chinese literatures.” Jack writes, Ecco Press asked Carolyn Kizer to contribute to its volume of Dante translations. Kizer responded by translating Inferno, Canto XVII, into what she calls “antique hipster”:   “Yo, Dan, just give a look at this repulsive creature Called Fraud, the wall-buster; He’s the prime polluter, The poison in his tail’s an added feature.” Then Virgil gave the high sign to that stink Of rottenness, to make a three-point landing on the shore . . . .   It is an amazing effect–a little like translating Paradise Lost into baby talk. Dante’s “Ecco” (like the press), usually translated, “Lo,” becomes here “Yo.” “Wall-buster is an accurate rendering of “rompe i muri,” but it carries overtones of “ball-buster,” a term with which a “pro feminist” like Kizer was surely familiar. “The prime polluter” (Dante’s “colei che tutto ‘l mundo appuzza“) brings us even more definitely into the twentieth century with its ecological concerns, but a moment later the end rhyme of “creature / feature,” alive with echoes of ancient American television, returns us to at least the suggestion of terza rima. Virgil signals the monster, “that stink / Of rottenness,” to make a landing, and we go on with Dante’s story.   Kizer’s version was, she tells us, “quite properly rejected for irreverence and ‘not fitting in'” by the editors at Ecco Press. She published it under the title, “In Hell with Virg and Dan,” first in the magazine 13th Moon and then in her book, Harping On. A note to the poem states, “I just don’t care for Dante’s obsessions with shit and revenge. For me, he ranks up there with St. Paul as one of the most destructive literary geniuses of all time.”   This is Kizer’s poem, “The Intruder”:   My mother—preferring the strange to the tame: Dove-note, bone marrow, deer dung, Frog’s belly distended with finny young, Leaf-mold wilderness, harebell, toadstool, Odd, small snakes roving through the leaves, Metallic beetles rambling over stones: all Wild and natural!—flashed out her instinctive love, and quick, she Picked up the fluttering, bleeding bat the cat laid at her feet, And held the little horror to the mirror, where He gazed on himself, and shrieked like an old screen door far off.   Depended from her pinched thumb, each wing Came clattering down like a small black shutter. Still tranquil, she began, “It’s rather sweet …” The soft mouse body, the hard feral glint In the caught eyes. Then we saw, And recoiled: lice, pallid, yellow, Nested within the wing-pits, cozily sucked and snoozed. The thing dropped from her hands, and with its thud, Swiftly, the cat, with a clean careful mouth Closed on the soiled webs, growling, took them out to the back stoop.   But still, dark blood, a sticky puddle on the floor Remained, of all my mother’s tender, wounding passion For a whole wild, lost, betrayed, and secret life Among its dens and burrows, its clean stones, Whose denizens can turn upon the world With spitting tongue, an odor, talon, claw, To sting or soil benevolence, alien As our clumsy traps, our random scatter of shot. She swept to the kitchen. Turning on the tap, She washed and washed the pity from her hands.   …   Jack remarks,   “The Intruder” shows contradictory impulses in the same person. Similarly, is Dante a hero of poetry or a villain of religion for Kizer? Clearly, he is both, and what is said about him depends entirely on which context you are emphasizing. This is one of the exhilarating aspects of this poet’s work: it is never possible to predict what she will say about anything; she is constantly shifting perspectives…Kizer’s poems are frequently very funny, but they are also very touching and personal, and various other things besides. They are evidence of a mind which stays wonderfully open to its own potential contradictions.   This is from “Anniversaries: Claremont Avenue, from 1945.” It’s a marvelous example of a loosely pentameter line and the subtleties of free rhyming. It also remains relevant to the problems we still experience in 2020.   It’s 1985: in pain, my Mother-in-law has died. Appraisers from Doyle pick through her possessions: old furniture blistered by sun and central heat. Twenty-One Claremont is no longer ours. Recollections are blistered and faded too: My husband’s boyhood toys, my fragments of Chinese. Mothers have disappeared. Wars come and go. The past is present: what we choose to keep by a process none of us can ever know. Now those little girls are grandmothers who must remember, after fifty years the doll, the chill, the tears. Greatness felled at a blow. Memory fractured. Black and white apart. No sense of direction, we Americans. No place to go. The post Cover to Cover with Jack Foley – January 15, 2020 appeared first on KPFA.

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A celebration of the art of poetry. A well-known poet himself, Jack Foley’s considerable historical knowledge and his awareness of the current “scene” are incorporated into his radio shows and have made them a kaleidoscopic, always stimulating attraction for anyone interested in poetry.

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