On 2022-07-24 5:39 p.m., NancyGene wrote:
> On Sunday, July 24, 2022 at 8:18:17 PM UTC,
george...@yahoo.ca wrote:
>> On 2022-07-24 3:57 p.m., Will Dockery wrote:
>>> On Sunday, July 24, 2022 at 12:58:14 PM UTC-4,
george...@yahoo.ca wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Today's poem on Penny's Poetry Blog:
>>>> Talk, by AE Reiff
>>>> [...]
>>>> Breath inspires talk,
>>>> language, expression, thought,
>>>> suddenness of wings,
>>>> a base of wind, of dust and sun
>>>> [...]
>>>>
>>>>
https://gdancesbetty.blogspot.com/2022/07/talk-ae-reiff.html
>>>
>>> This is a PPB exclusive, I think?
>> He's also selling all his poems in an ebook -
>>
>>
https://gdancesbetty.blogspot.com/2020/11/new-chapbook-from-poet-aereiff.html
>>
>> - but I'm pretty sure that PPB is the only place on the web to find his
>> poetry. Not that we asked for anything like that, just for a one-time
>> publication right. But he likes how Penny treats his poetry, and he's
>> sent us a lot of readers over the years.
> It's in "Frigg Magazine:"
>
http://www.friggmagazine.com/issuefiftyseven/poetry/reiff/talk.htm
Good find, NG. I've added that info (linked) on the blog page.
> We are not fond of the poem, which winds around universal nonsense. There is also a mistake in the poem.
>
> "Everything has breath. Everything that has breath." Is that profound? Everyone has a vagina. Everyone who has a vagina.
>
Heh! That reminds me of something on my wiki. According to the DNB
(which I used for the wiki article), Henry Brooke had a tragedy, /The
Earl of Essex/ staged in London, containing the line: "Who rule o'er
freemen should themselves be free," == which Samuel Johnson parodied as,
"Who drives fat oxen should himself be fat."
> "three hundred eternal
> breathes with the same."
> Is this the 300 Spartans? We know that the average reading rate is about 300 words per minute, but that is not breaths. There is a (wrong) claim that we are breathing the same air as the dinosaurs did.
> Is this the
> "Anything that’s done or so recalls
> is breathing the same breath as all"
> line?
We may not breathe the same molecules as the dinosaurs, but we are
breathing the same atoms. I won't try to explain the rest (I don't know
what "Three hundred" is alluding to) or argue it. I wouldn't even
suggest changes with him, now that I know it's already been published --
I did that once with a poet named Vera, and almost made a lifelong enemy
over that.
>
> The poem is new-agey in a non-new-agey time.
>
Mystical experiences are the hardest to communicate successfully. "For
those who don't understand, no explanation is possible," as the old
saying has it.