Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Need an Intro to Slam and Spoken Word Poetry?

Following Hopkins' lavish fascination with the musicality of language, I was disappointed because the majority of recordings of his poetry is by old English people, which ruins it.  I personally think Hopkins' would be better read by modern slam poets and rappers because of the avalanche of melody be packs into such close lines.  Often slam poets are known for their aggressive and even bellicose character, but this comes out of the emphatic in spoken word poetry.  These poets mean what they mean and what sometimes manifests itself as anger always stems from spoken word's essnece of sincerity.  To use Hopkinsian language the emphasis is to convey the instress and so that you might see the inscape.

From this check out some of my favorite spoken word poets who make their living in this emphasis.  This is Anis Mogjani doing "Shake the Dust" which was my first introduction to modern spoken word poetry.  His reverence, emphasis and playfulness are always compelling . . .


One of the most impressive parts of spoken word poetry is the momentum that is built in its performance.  The stanzas in a poem become movements in a symphony.  In this video, Anis pairs his poetry with the music of The Album Leaf's song "The Outer Banks" which brings the momentum and fervor of Anis and the atmosphere of The Album Leaf all to an HNL ('hole 'nutha level) . . .


I just got into the poetry of Sarah Kay last week and I am moved by the marriage of her poetry's sensuality and sincerity.  Her ability to make you feel the emptiness she describes comes in her word choice and her voice in a way that reminds me of the first time I read Rilke . . .


With spoken word poetry you might notice the blurring between poetry as a literary genre and rap as a musical genre.  What really is the difference between Hopkins strolling in the woods and writing in absolute alliterative delight the opening lines of "The Windhover," "I caught this morning morning’s minion, king-/ dom of daylight’s dauphin, dapple-dawn-drawn Falcon, in his riding"and any no-name guy freezing his fingers on a Detroit sidewalk as he spits rhymes and trips over his words with his friends?  Think about that while listening to Aesop Rock's attention to language's music in "None Shall Pass."


Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Gerard Manley Hopkins: A Priesthood of all Poets

 Joyce (1882-1941)

James Joyce wrote that a poet is "a priest of the imagination, transmuting the daily bread of experience into the radiant body of everlasting life" (A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man).

I discovered this little gem in a footnote while reading Philip A. Ballinger's The Poem as Sacrament: The Theological Aesthetic of Gerard Manley Hopkins, which is fitting enough as Hopkins is perhaps the most notable example of someone being both a priest and a poet.  Ballinger's work is beautiful in the way that it focuses on Hopkins sacramental poetic vision which is that a poem stresses the 'instress' of a thing or that a poem 're-presents' the 'inscape' of a thing.

Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844-1889)
Both these definitions may be in Hopkins' particular idiom, but they represent an idea fundamental to both aesthetic and sacramental conversations.  If we begin from the foundations of sacramental theology, we begin with the understanding that a sacrament is an "external visible sign of an invisible grace," or (even better) an "efficacious sign."  To stick with Joyce's idiom, let us focus on the Eucharist as the sacrament at hand, as the Eucharist is the "efficacious sign and sublime cause of that communion in the divine life" (CCC §1325, italics mine).  The efficacious nature of sacraments are that they accomplish what they signify; the Eucharist is a symbol and sign of our communion and it brings about our communion.  Now the hinge in Catholic sacramental theology that allows this accomplishment and significance to co-exist is a handy Latin phrase:

sacramenta continent quae significant 
(sacraments contain what they signify)

The Eucharist brings us into communion with the Body of Christ because our communion and the Body of Christ are contained in the Sacrament: they are the sacrament.  The sign causes our unity to Christ, because he is there.  The intimacy between God and the signs he uses to express Himself are clearly identified from the beginning of John's Gospel where he states that "The Word was God" (1:1).  This  idea can allow Catholics to tip their hats to (the convert to Catholicism) Marshall McLuhan and agree that at least with God, "the medium is the message."

McLuhan (1911-1980)
In Hopkins, we can see a radical appropriation of these ideas to his Logo-centric understanding of language.  Hopkins' understanding of poetic language resonates with a sentiment one often hears in conversations of Catholic apologetics concerning the Eucharist as the Passion of Christ not 'represented,' but 're-presented.'  In this sense the Eucharist is not a play echoing the life of Jesus, but it is the life of Jesus, accessible to us now.  Hopkins' understanding of language follows his metaphysical perspective, which was heavily influenced by John Duns Scotus.  Within Hopkins' Scotian mind there are two dizzying conceptual poles between which the poet is ever-reeling: the univocity of being and haecceity of beings.

John Duns Scotus (1265-1308)
These two poles of all beings' essential unity with Being and their also essential uniquity or particularity ('thisness') are the paradox of metaphysics.  Aquinas resolved this problem with distinctions between being and essence (De ente et essentia) and the analogy of being.  Scotus subsumes this tension into his theology with the distinctions of being per se and being per participationem, where Creation participates in God's being perhaps as Eastern theology distinguishes between God's essence and energies or in theosis how we become "partakers of the divine nature" (2 Peter 1:4).  The dynamic practical character of Eastern divinization is perhaps more closely fitting to Hopkins' conception of language, due to the spiritual life that creation represents in his poetry.  Hopkins' poetry is best metaphysically understood if one grasps that he writes with the theological tension (or communication) between this being and Being.

Hesse savoring the inscape of a landscape.
From this metaphysical foundation we move on to Hopkins' two primary conceptual innovations.  Hopkins constantly mentions in his journals, letters and essays that he senses the instress and sees the inscape of everything.  These Hopkinsian neologisms Hans Urs von Balthasar defines "power of a thing" and "form of a thing" respectively (GL III, 366).  By way of analogy, one could say Hopkins walking in the woods and stumbling upon a magnificent flower lavishly blooming is like Herman Hesse coming out of a mountain trail which opens up on a stunning view of the surrounding landscape.  In Hopkinsian idiom the 'inscape' is the landscape Hesse contemplates and the 'instress' is that which stuns him into contemplation.

The relation between the instress and inscape is riddled throughout Hopkins' thought and while it can be perplexing (How can the inscape qua form of the landscape, be more than the hills, trees, rocks, etc. and yet also absolutely in each detail of the hill, tree, rock, etc.), but comprehending the inscape is not the matter of this essay, and actually any attempt to do so may actually comprise the integrity of the mystery. 

The point of this present reflection is that the poet is the priest, who tries to convey this instress and inscape to his audience.  The poem stresses, signifies and accomplishes the original instress and inscape, so that the reader might stand with the poet in contemplation of the same thing as the priest and laity commune with one another.  It is this common sentiment, which underscores the Eucharist's ability to bring us back to the Last Supper, Calvary, the Manger, the Heavenly Liturgy, and wherever the Mass was, is, or will be celebrated.

The sacerdotal role of the poet is so prevelant in Hopkins, because Christ is behind everything in Hopkins' poetry, because he is behind every thing—as he wrote: "There lives the dearest freshness deep down things." Hopkins has such percipience into the unfathomably unique minutia of the natural world, because in it he sees the Christ in whom "all things hold together" (Col 1:17).  Because Christ is the Word which orders everything that is, Ballinger artfully writes that for Hopkins "all things 'rhyme' because they are patterned by the Word" (145).  Hopkins' is able to see a world "charged with the grandeur of God" and can see Christ truly play "in ten thousand places, lovely in limbs, and lovely in eyes not his."

Balthasar (1905-1988)
From the superfluity of this revelation rushes the unrivaled musicality of Hopkins' language, which Balthasar writes "sweeps the whole cultivated world of beauty of the Victorian age into the dustbin" (GL III, 362).  Hopkins' stress on his language's rhythm, rhyme, alliteration, assonance and musicality in general is absolutely unparalleled.  While the Victorian aestheticism of Dandyism and "art for art's sake" rendered art absurd, decorative or superficial, Hopkins' poems were sacraments and incarnations.  The music of his language and how it challenges the tongue and delights the ear could not be swept away like the others, because Hopkins' words signified and manifested the Word himself, who is the Rock of Ages which was not cut by human hands (Dan 2: 34, 45), the Rock upon whom poets and priests build their houses (Matt 7:24).

But just as the Eucharist is not mere bread but a sacrifice of love, so too the foundation of these houses is the sacrifical "lamb slain from the foundations of the world" (Rev 13:8).  Balthasar writes, in his treatment of Hopkins, that coupled with this Eucharistic image, Christ's Cross "is the fundamental, ontological presupposition of all natural processes that all, knowingly or not, intrinsically signify or intend by pointing beyond themselves" (GL III, 394).  As a priest, it is Christ's sacrifice that imbues Hopkins' vision of the world and Christ's sacrifice of love is the heart of the world.  Hopkins' sensitivity to the most minute beauties of nature, which rendered him odd to his fellow Jesuits (who did not know about his secret and personal poetic life), was because he intuited that all the beauty in existence derived from the Lamb, whose sacrifice is gratuitously offered as a supper: "How soldiers platting thorns around CHRIST’S Head/ Grapes grew and drops of wine were shed."
"For what has to be interpreted is not concepts (of 'universal', abstract truths), but images (of the unique, personal, divine-human truth), and here poetry is the absolutely appropriate theological language, and Hopkins brings the great English tradition back into the Church by his own creative achievement" (Balthasar, GL III, p. 391, emphasis mine)
Perhaps Balthasar's understanding of poetry as the absolutely appropriate theological language, stems from the essentially sacramental character of Catholic theology.  The centrality of the Eucharist in Catholic theology is unquestionable; it is "the source and summit of the Christian life" (CCC §1324).  Thus the liturgical celebration of the Eucharist is perhaps concentrically of the next importance, and Hopkins' sacramental poetics have a lot of potential insight.  Though Hopkins' poetry might not meet all people where they are at, anyone can see that the creative use of language is captivating whether it be in music, poetry or even advertising, and obviously the language of prayer (whose form echoes stanzas of poems already) needs to be in dialogue with poetry.

But the relationship between liturgy and poetry is deeper than mere wording.  Liturgy's etymology means the "work of the people" (λειτουργία) and the poetry's etymology comes from the verb "to do" or more specifically "to make" or "create" (ποιηω).  Careful reflection and participation in the poetic life as we have seen exemplified in Hopkins (attentiveness to "instresses" and "inscapes," contemplation of beauty, openness to creatively and spontaneously responding to God) is absolutely what has the potential to rejuvenate the liturgical life of the Church, which is to say the life of the Church itself.

The lesson to be learned in this reflection of Hopkins, is that it is imperative that we move from praxis to poiesis, from mere or habitual 'doing' to creative collaboration with God in His own creative life.  Realizing our "priesthood of all believers" may need to begin with recovering the poetry of believing.  For if we neglect our poetic stewardship, we stop being co-workers or pro-creators with God and how is any species to survive without procreation?  Hopkins' theo-poetic vision invites us to be struck by the instress of God that we might contemplate His inscape and offer our own pens, paper, voices, minds, hearts and ultimately lives to stressing and representing them with our our poems, our lives and our selves sacramentally. 


References
Video Biography of Hopkins Part I
Biography of Hopkins
The Poetry Foundation's Podcast: Close reading of "The Windhover"

Introductory Poems
God's Grandeur
"As kingfishers catch fire"
Pied Beauty
The Windhover
Binsey Poplars (Watch his attention to nature's unified and individual beauty)
The Blessed Virgin Compared to the Air we Breathe (Mariology in Hopkins' sacramentality is another expansive issue)
May Magnificat
Wreck of the Deutschland (A Longer Poem)

It seems all of his English Poems and Fragments (No Latin, Greek or Welsh)

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Lines Drawn with Love

In the simplest
glance or a word
people stop being
two dots floating
on a blank page.

Out of their black depths,
they suddenly spill
themselves across
this white abyss
of mundane days
and lonely lives.

Some relationships are
simply strung between
the dots and hang like
the thin string strung
between two rusty cans.

Some rush like rivers, racing,
running their course as they
spill themselves
and render exchanges of wonder,
curving, crooked, long, short,
where the points are gone
and only their Line remains.

Loving lines lie scattered
crossing this canvas
and in the depths and
shades of their meeting
a greater dialogue emerges.

If only we lonely points knew
in all our out pouring
in all our self-spilling
we were painting a Portrait.

My First Poem

The first poem I ever wrote was in German.  It snuck up on me while I was trying to take a nap in March 2010, just a few weeks before I went to study for a summer in Tübingen. If I've ever had a clearly defined pivotal moment in my life that continues to resonate with who I am today, I think it's here. 

Ich bin nicht Dichter,                                  I'm no poet
bin ich nur Theologe                                   I'm only a theologian
mit einem Herz                                           with a heart
so steinig und klein,                                    so small and stony,
aber vielleicht sollen Theologen,                but maybe we theologians
diese Steine werfen                                     should throw these stones
und immer Dichter sein.                              and always poets be.

Adagio for Acorns

Angels composing symphonies
eternally scribbling melodies
     on wings feathered yet unfettered.

Transposing music of celestial spheres
For our lowly earthen ears
     sullied, muddied and weathered.

Our dirty toes will never run so deep
where warm tree roots gently sleep
     undisturbed and growing more numb.

For man is a mix of blood and soil,
who dances through his terrestrial toil
     So long as there’s a song to hum.

I set out at the thaw of Dawn
when I heard the Angel Song.
     The grass still graced with morning dew.

Strolling through trails from which we spring
I can hear an entire forest sing.
     Every day it plays the song anew.

The woods & winds commune
As twigs, trees & berries tune
     and I sit on a trail seldom trodden.

The tones of cones & stones pound,
arboreal acoustics resound
     harmonies we have long forgotten.

Wood & wind celebrate
as trembling needles resonate.
     This angelic symphony tosses and turns.

Wander and ponder eating berries
That you might hear these melodies
     Finely filtered through the ferns.




My Pond

I hope that this place will be a Pond for Ponderings, because that is what I call my journals. Pond is the key word. It's not an ocean for whales and sharks. It's not a stream that has no time to stop and reflect. It's a simple place, with simple fish, and simple pleasures.


When you go fishing, you often catch small fish.  A blue gill with some striking stripes or maybe a larger bass with a couple of thwarted attempts at angling dangling from his lips, but few of us rarely dip our hooks in to yank out a sturgeon (even though legend has it known to happen in these waters).  The only way to get bigger fish is to toss a smaller one back now and again.  They need to swim, grow, mingle, and multiply.

This place is about catch and release.  The poems, prayers, pictures and ponderings you'll find here were caught in my soul.  We are all ponds in which these things are teeming, be they a line in a letter, a selection from our journals, or a loving word from a friend.  There is a serenity and exhiliaration in fishing, which is something we also find in the poetic and religious life; the peace in our stillness and the thrill of struggle and discovery.  Have the courage to throw your thoughts out, because, “as a man thinketh in his heart, so is he” (Prov 23:7).  Afterall, who knows what a simple thought or a simple man might grow into . . .