THE CLOSEST I’VE GOTTEN TO MODERNISM
When I lived in Boston from 1990 to 1995, I experienced my most productive period of writing poetry. I was in a city in which the Arts were at times more important than food. I hung around with a wide array of writers and musicians and a smaller circle devoted to the craft of writing.
My influences at the time were the classical forms. Shakespeare’s sonnets and Keats’ eloquent and passionate rhymes. I was at heart a Romantic. A friend gave me a copy of early 20th century European poetry. Surrealism and Modernism were now placed in my lap. If I were a chef, it would have been like someone introduced me to a new cuisine. The elements are different as is the ultimate product. At times, however, the creative impulse remains the same.
I wrote several pieces that were without distinct forms with the intention of broadening my language, my voice. It was as much an intellectual effort as a creative one. While I do not disregard these works some thirty years later, I simply recognize they were the product of a young man stretching his creative mind.
This is one of those poems.
5 VIEWS OF A SKYSCRAPER
I.
Looking at it from across the river,
it may be one of many.
But it has its own style and form
distinctive from the others.
Trying to see it,
there are far too many passing
in front in the foreground,
all different in their intrusions.
II.
Five or six blocks away,
a parallel movement
and a perpendicular turn.
No straight-line availability.
If only I could fly to the roof…
III.
Castle of financial woe
O ye who enter at the gate
Beware the battlements
A tower of Babel
A different language
on each floor
Man creates something greater than he.
No fear; he can destroy it.
IV.
Straight across my vision is undaunted.
An expanse of epic measure
fills the full of my retina,
inflates the complete peripheral,
overwhelms my capacity to protect.
Strai
ght d
own I
reali
ze th
e pre
cario
us po
sitio
n, ha
lf-wa
y bet
ween
morbi
d fea
r and
exult
ation
V.
All these pipes and lights,
concrete and hissing,
this ugly sewer,
this musty netherworld,
this holds it together.
This keeps it tall and proud.
This creates majesty.
I would be disgusted to roam
inside of myself.