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  • I just want to read you guys some poems.

  • I chose four poems that aren't my own and one that is.

  • I tried to choose poems that would allow you to use your imagination

  • to re-imagine some things.

  • Also, to prove to you that poetry isn't just this inaccessible thing

  • that people change the word order of their sentences

  • It's alive and it's applicable,

  • and you'll understanding what I am saying for the most part.

  • First one I want to read is by a poet named David Ferry

  • who I studied under at BU.

  • He just came up with a new book.

  • This poem is about aging, which I think is something that we all experience.

  • It's called "Soul".

  • What am I doing inside this old man's body?

  • I feel like I'm the insides of a lobster,

  • All thought, and all digestion, and pornographic

  • Inquiry, and getting about, and bewilderment,

  • And fear, avoidance of trouble, belief in what,

  • God knows, vague memories of friends,

  • and what they said last night, and seeing, outside of myself,

  • From here inside myself, waving my claws

  • Inconsequential, wavering, and my feelers

  • Preternatural, trembling, with their amazing

  • Troubling sensitivity to threat.

  • And I'm aware of and embarrassed by my ways

  • Of getting around, and my protective shell.

  • Where is it that she I loved has gone to,

  • as this cold sea water's washing over my back?

  • Staying along the lines of

  • I love David's metaphor of being a lobster, the insides of a lobster.

  • I'm [gonna] stick with animals

  • For a second, literary one second,

  • I want you to think about what it's like to be eaten by a lion,

  • which won't happen in America, unless you're at a zoo, I guess.

  • In this poem I'm going to read, is called "How To Be Eaten By A Lion"

  • by a poet named Michael Johnson.

  • And he re-imagines it.

  • So we usuallywe imagine it as this horrible experience,

  • and he puts a twist on that and I thought it was good.

  • "How To Be Eaten By A Lion" by Michael Johnson.

  • If you hear the rush, the swish of mottled sand

  • and dust kicked up under the striving paws,

  • its cessation, falling into the sharp and brittle grass

  • like the tick of a tun roof under sun

  • or hint of rain that nightly wakes you,

  • try to stand your ground. Try not to scream,

  • for it devalues you. That tawny head and burled

  • mange, the flattened ears of its sleek engine

  • will seem only a blur, a shock, a shadow,

  • across your neck that leaves you cold.

  • It may seem soft, barely a blow,

  • more like a falling, an exquisite giving

  • of yourself to the ground, made numb

  • by those eyes. It may be easier just to watch,

  • for fighting will only prolong things,

  • and you will have no time to notice the sky,

  • the texture of dust, what incredible leaves

  • the trees have. Instead, focus on your life,

  • its crimson liquor he grows drunk on.

  • Notice the way the red highlights his face,

  • how the snub nose is softened, the lips made fuller;

  • notice his deft musculature, his rapture,

  • because in all of creation there is not art

  • to compare with such elegance, such simplicity.

  • Notice this and remember it,

  • this way in which you became beautiful

  • when you thought there was nothing more.

  • Not bad, ha?! (Laughter)

  • Another thing I like about poetry

  • Something I've learned as I've written it for the last couple of years is that

  • poetry gives you the opportunity – I guess all literature does

  • but poetry in specific gives you the opportunity

  • to experience something you wouldn't otherwise experience.

  • For example this poem,

  • I'm not gonna tell you what it's about, cause you will figure it out really fast.

  • This poem is about an experience that I hopefully will never have...

  • that I can't have.

  • And the poet rendered this

  • both interesting to me as well as beautiful.

  • It's by a poet name Juliana Baggott.

  • This is the first poem of hers I ever read

  • I haven't read any since either.

  • I might not, 'cause I love this poem.

  • But this one is called "For Furious Nursing Baby".

  • Frothy and pink as a rabid pig, you

  • a mauler – a lunatic, stricken with

  • a madness induced by fleshsqueeze my skin

  • until blotched, nicked. Your fingernails

  • are jagged and mouth-slick. Pinprick scabs jewel

  • my breasts. Your tongue, your wisest muscle,

  • is the wet engine of discontent.

  • It self-fastens by a purse-bead of spit

  • while your elegant hands flail, conducting

  • orchestral milk, and sometimes prime the pump.

  • Nipple in mouth, nipple in hand, you have

  • your cake and eat it too. Then when wrenched

  • loose, youll eat sorrow, loss - one flexed hand twists,

  • as you open your mouth to eat your fist.

  • I love it.

  • If you told me five years ago I was going to wear makeup

  • and stand in front of people and read poems about breastfeeding

  • (Laughter)

  • I would've gone into politics.

  • (Laughter)

  • This next poem I'm going to read is rather famous

  • his name is Robert Pinsky.

  • He is the reason I am here.

  • Literally, he gave TEDxNewEngland my name and they sent me an email.

  • He was also the last line of defense

  • he approved me for getting into the Writing Program at BU,

  • which is phenomenal if any one of you want to go in the poetry

  • that's really good.

  • This poem is interesting to me

  • because it's a way of seeing yourself outside of yourself,

  • seeing yourself in another context.

  • And I might've just liked this

  • because I love the movie "The Last Samurai"

  • where Tom Cruise learns to be a samurai.

  • But this poem

  • I'm not gonna tell you what I think it's about, you can choose for yourself.

  • It's really interesting though.

  • It's called "Samurai Song".

  • When I had no roof I made Audacity my roof.

  • When I had no supper my eyes dined.

  • When I had no eyes I listened.

  • When I had no ears I thought.

  • When I had no thought I waited.

  • When I had no father I made Care my father.

  • When I had no mother I embraced order.

  • When I had no friend I made Quiet my friend.

  • When I had no Enemy I opposed my body.

  • When I had no temple I made My voice my temple.

  • I have No priest, my tongue is my choir.

  • When I have no means fortune Is my means.

  • When I have Nothing, death will be my fortune.

  • Need is my tactic, detachment Is my strategy.

  • When I had No lover I courted my sleep.

  • Robert's a lot better at what he does than I am.

  • This last poem, like I mentioned, is my own.

  • It's going to be coming out

  • in the magazine Salamander,

  • which is based here in Boston

  • great magazine if you're looking for something to read.

  • I wrote a lot of poems when I was at BU

  • about growing up in Idaho,

  • which is where I grew up.

  • And this one is kind of the opening poem to that sequence.

  • It's called "Idaho History".

  • It has an epigram, which is the motto of the state:

  • it's "Mayest thou live forever",

  • and that comes back later on, but not in English.

  • "Idaho History".

  • Referring to the territory itself,

  • the Comanches said, "ídaahę́".

  • The Plains Apaches used it too,

  • but there it meant enemy.

  • In 1860s, Mr. Willing said that Idaho was a Shoshone phrase

  • "a lie", although the sun did seem to come from the mountains.

  • There was no shortage of outside places to explore.

  • I remember raspberries swimming in their bridges,

  • garish snakes and mace and jars,

  • holding open barbed wire fences with two hands and a foot.

  • My eyes never left the ground in the foot hills.

  • I'd scoured the dirt,

  • hoping each stone was an arrowhead,

  • slicing dead reeds for Indian gum.

  • At the fourth grade rendezvous

  • I traded three beadwork geckos for leather pouches,

  • perfect for holding water rocks and Sagebrush lizards.

  • I caught one on [Unclear]

  • his tail flicked my fingers,

  • his ventral patches were blue and he was squishy.

  • "Astopra pechiua", I said

  • and flung him through the air.

  • Thanks very much. (Applause)

I just want to read you guys some poems.

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TEDx】今天的美國詩歌。卡爾文-奧爾森在TEDxNewEngland上的演講 (【TEDx】American poetry today: Calvin Olsen at TEDxNewEngland)

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    阿多賓 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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