the_rck: (Default)
the_rck ([personal profile] the_rck) wrote2016-04-09 04:31 pm
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Hm. If I don’t like the first four or five pages of a poet’s collected works, is that enough to say I don’t like the poet’s work? This collection is a little odd because it has a play first, so I’m kind of thinking I need to skip to the end of that and see if I like anything beyond that, but I also don’t really want to bother because I very much am not enjoying the play. My main problem is that, as I read it, I keep going, "WTH? Who talks like that?" The words are pretty but not actually coherent in terms of conveying meaning or even image/emotion.

There’s something that I keep thinking I want to post about, but when I open my document to write, I can’t for the life of me remember what it is.

I’m still draggingly tired. The hard part is that I know that sleeping right now won’t help and that my instinct to eat all the food will lead to bad places without giving me any actual energy. But part of my mind remains convinced that, if I eat the right thing, I will magically feel better. It’s days like this when I really, really wish that Provigil had actually worked for me.
carbonel: Beth wearing hat (Default)

[personal profile] carbonel 2016-04-10 01:36 am (UTC)(link)
I haven't read a lot of Amy Lowell's poetry, but I've liked what I've read -- especially "Patterns." That might be worth a try.
gillo: (poet)

[personal profile] gillo 2016-04-10 04:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Blake wrote two sets of shortish poems, collected as Songs of Innocence and Experience. Most of the famous poems come from there. You would probably dislike his long, rambling blank verse poems.

It's interesting that I'm not particularly familiar with some of the poets you list - I didn't do an American Lit option at university, though I did a lot of British poetry.

I suspect you might enjoy some of Robert Browning's character-based poems, My Last Duchess,Porphyria's Lover, The Laboratory, which is very dark, and The Pied Piper of Hamelin which you may well have read as a child, but is well worth returning to.

I'm very partial to Byron, some of whose work is very satirical and some very dark: Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, the bit about the eve of Waterloo, We'll Go No More A-Roving and Darkness

I could go on...