Its leaves flutter, they thrive or wither, its outspread
Signatures like wings open to form the gutter.
The pages riffling brush my fingertips with their edges:
Whispering, erotic touch this hand knows from ages back.
What progress we have made, they are burning my books, not
Me, as once they would have done, said Freud in 1933.
A little later, the laugh was on him, on the Jews,
On his sisters. O people of the book, wanderers, anderes.
When we have wandered all our ways, said Raleigh, Time
Shuts up the story of our days–beheaded, his life like a book.
The sound bk: lips then palate, outward plosive to interior stop.
Bk, bch: the beech tree, pale wood incised with Germanic runes.
Enchanted wood. Glyphs and characters between boards.
The reader's dread of finishing a book, that loss of a world,
And also the reader's dread of beginning a book, becoming
Hostage to a new world, to some spirit or spirits unknown.
Look! What thy mind cannot contain you can commit
To these waste blanks. The jacket ripped, the spine cracked,
Still it arouses me, torn crippled god like Loki the schemer
As the book of Lancelot aroused Paolo and Francesca
Who cling together even in Hell, O passionate, so we read.
Love that turns or torments or comforts me, love of the need
Of love, need for need, columns of characters that sting
Sometimes deeper than any music or movie or picture,
Deeper sometimes even than a body touching another.
And the passion to make a book–passion of the writer
Smelling glue and ink, sensuous. The writer's dread of making
Another tombstone, my marker orderly in its place in the stacks.
Or to infiltrate and inhabit another soul, as a splinter of spirit
Pressed between pages like a wildflower, odorless, brittle.
"Book" is excerpted from First Things To Hand, by Robert Pinsky. Copyright © 2006 by Robert Pinsky. Used by permission of Sarabande Books, Inc. All rights reserved.
U.S. Poet Laureate appointed an unprecedented 3 terms. Winner of the PEN/Voelcker Award, the William Carlos Williams Prize, and the Lenore Marshall. Weekly columnist for The Washing Post. Has appeared on the "The Simpsons" and "The Colbert Report." His book, Gulf Music (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007) will be released in paperback later this year.
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ROBERT PINSKY’s first two terms as United States Poet Laureate were marked by such visible dynamism, and such national enthusiasm in response, that the Library of Congress appointed him to an unprecedented third term. Throughout his career, Pinsky has been dedicated to identifying and invigorating poetry’s place in the world.
As Poet Laureate, Robert Pinsky became a public ambassador for poetry, founding the Favorite Poem Project, in which thousands of Americans — of varying backgrounds, all ages, and from every state — shared their favorite poems. Pinsky believed that, contrary to stereotype, poetry had a vigorous presence in the American cultural landscape. The project sought to document that presence, giving voice to the American audience for poetry. The anthology Americans’ Favorite Poems, which include letters from project participants, is in its eighteenth printing. The new anthology, An Invitation to Poetry, comes with a DVD featuring twenty-seven of the FPP video segments, as seen on PBS.
Elegant and tough, vividly imaginative, Pinsky’s poems have earned praise for their wild musical energy and ambitious range. His book Gulf Music (2007) is his seventh volume of poetry. His The Figured Wheel: New and Collected Poems 1966-1996 was a Pulitzer Prize nominee and received the Lenore Marshall Award and the Ambassador Book Award of the English Speaking Union. In May 2006 his chapbook entitled First Things to Hand was published. His most recent book is Gulf Music.
Pinsky’s books about poetry include Poetry and the World, nominated for the National Book Critics’ Circle Award, The Sounds of Poetry, and more recently, Democracy, Culture and the Voice of Poetry. Pinsky contends that, though intimate, poetry addresses cultural needs by communicating a shared set of social meanings, a paradox that becomes part of his effort to demonstrate the complexity of American poetry.
Robert Pinsky’s landmark, best-selling translation of The Inferno of Dante received the Los Angeles Times Book Award in poetry and the Howard Morton Landon Prize for translation. He is also co-translator of The Separate Notebooks, poems by Nobel Prize winner Czeslaw Milosz. Pinsky’s prose book, The Life of David, is a lively retelling and examination of the David stories, narrating a wealth of legend as well as scripture.
The poetry editor for the online magazine Slate, for seven years Pinsky appeared regularly on The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. He writes the weekly “Poet’s Choice” column for the Washington Post. He was elected in 1999 to the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Pinsky’s poems appear in magazines such as The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, The Threepenny Review, American Poetry Review, and frequently in The Best American Poetry anthologies. He teaches in the graduate writing program at Boston University. Robert Pinsky is also the winner of the PEN/Voelcker Award, the William Carlos Williams Prize, the Lenore Marshall, and the National Foundation for Jewish Culture’s 2006 Jewish Cultural Achievement Award in Literary Arts. He is one of the few members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters to have appeared on “The Simpsons.”
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