Friends at Grinnell College . . . thanks for hosting me for a poetry reading in the Writers@Grinnell series there this evening.
Honestly, you were the best audience I've had in quite a long time. I felt very welcomed. And I felt a synergy among us that really enlivened my performance. So thanks! From the bottom of my heart. I know that's a cliché but my gratitude is certainly heartfelt.
Gratitude and props to Dr. Carolyn Jacobson for coordinating the evening, providing great publicity, and giving such a generous introduction. And many thanks also to Dr. Shuchi Kapila, English department head, for your hospitality.
And thanks also to my daughter Amanda for a truly lovely visit. It was a genuine treat for your old man to give a reading at your school. I love you, hon! Congratulations on your last semester at Grinnell.
Here's the new, one-day-old poem I read tonight. (Terza rima in pentameter, if you're into such esoterica.)
Leviathan
My friend Janine has a tiny terra cotta serpent made of arches, loops of red fire-hardened clay. When you set up
the curves in a row, a line on an obsid- ian table-top, let's say, or any other shiny surface, water-like, what you get
is an illusion, mirage, fantasy — a dotted stitch sewn by your eyes: four small arcs, at one end (rising) the head of a velociraptor,
at the other (diving) the tail of a rattlesnake. On this coffee table of dark stone, a mirror clouded by years of creosote mist, Loch
Ness breached by mesozoic shimmer, coils of a beast that should have been long dead. St. George, England's patron . . . it was him or
this monster, devil-vermilion-scaled ophid- ian champion. Chalk one up for good Sir George. Or is this Quetzalcoatl? Feathered god
dipping in and out of clouds, a large pterodactyl-winged, emerald-eyed messiah. Or Poseidon’s messenger, the huge
sea-snake sent to devour Andromeda, killed by Perseus, conquistador of the Gorgon. Whose hair was made of small snakes, dread-
locks each exactly like these curls of auburn. The sea-dwelling Orc the hippogriff-riding Ruggiero bested to save Angelica. The Kraken.
The Basilisk. The Wyrm. Treasure-heaping Wyvern: Grendel’s cousin, Beowulf’s fate. Geryon, snake with scorpion tail, winging
Dante downward into abyss. Bahamut. The Giant Anaconda. Ouroboros. Dragon, dragon, dragon. But no, it’s not
like that. It’s just a little hocus-pocus, a parlor trick. Just a sea serpent of brick-red, kiln-fired curlicues.
And yet, she must also be a Titan somehow. Somewhere inside the terra cotta smoulders a small flame of a Leviathan.
— Vince Gotera | | | Parking Lot Border Florida State University |
| Quetzalcoatl (www.ravenmedium.com)
| | Constellation diagram, Cetus the Sea Snake (sent by Poseidon to eat the maiden Andromeda). From Chandra Observatory.
| | Ruggiero saving Angelica from the Orc sea serpent (Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Ariosto [1516], art by Gustave Doré, from Wikipedia.)
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I wrote this poem as a response to Robert Lee Brewer's Poem-a-Day Challenge for National Poetry Month, in his Poetic Asides blog sponsored by Writer's Digest. During the month of April, Robert issued a prompt each day, accompanied by a sample poem he had written from that prompt. This poem was inspired by a prompt to write an animal poem. In "Leviathan," I have ranged freely, pretty loose and easy, with a coterie of legendary or literary animals that fall within the general herd of sea serpent/dragon/reptile/amphibian/dinosaur/snake.
While the topic may be loosey-goosey, the craft is tight: roughed-up pentameter with terza rima (aba bcb cdc . . .), often slant rhymed, sometimes distantly. Pentameter: the BAS- | il-ISK | the WYRM | TREAS-ure | HEAP-ing (line 28) / WY-vern | GREN-del's | COUS-in | BE-o- | wulf's FATE (line 29). Terza Rima (starting at line 8): arcs / rattlesnake / Loch // mirror / shimmer / him or // dead / ophid- / god // etc. Then the middle rhyme word cotta in the last stanza is grouped with the a rhyme at the top: cotta and set up. Fun, eh?
In any case, back to the reading at Grinnell College: here are a couple of photos, courtesy of Molly McArdle. Thanks again for a magical evening, everyone!
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Vince Gotera's poetry reading Writers@Grinnell reading series Grinnell College, 30 April 2009
Photos by Molly McArdle |
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Oh, also, a couple of students bought Ghost Wars but didn't ask for them to be signed. Yes, they were already pre-signed, but if you like I can sign them more personally. Just tell Amanda. Quite easy to arrange.
Added 1 April 2012: I just found out that "Leviathan" was published by the University of Iowa's arts and writing website, The Daily Palette. Quite fitting I found that out today because I'm now taking up again Robert Lee Brewer's poem-a-day challenge, as part of National Poetry Month, 2012. Hope I end up again this time with a poem as lovely and lucky as "Leviathan." Take care, everyone.
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10 comments:
I like that poem, Vince. I didn't realize you were writing to Robert's challenges, too. That was a fun series.
Good to see you in action, too!
Hi, Pris! I had hoped to write 30 poems, one for each of Robert's prompts. But I ended up only writing two. So my output was 1/15th. But hey, two poems are a gift, right?
In that photo above, I was performing the poem "Maybe Dats Youwr Pwoblem Too" by Jim Hall. In my readings, I try to do one or two poems by other writers along with my own. I can tell from what my hands are doing here that I had just gotten to the "wacing cawrs" line ("racing cars").
That poem is so fun to perform. I've got a video performing it. To see that video, go to http://vincegotera.blogspot.com/2009/04/vidpo-10-maybe-dats-youwr-pwoblem-too_17.html.
Hope you're well, Pris. Take care.
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