On Feb 23rd Monday Love wrote to Thewayitworks:
If I want to convey to you right now some truth, I will do everything I can to put the argument before you as nakedly and clear as I can possibly present it.
Expatriate Poet replied with a quirky little parable in the guise of a poem. In it a group of diners in a highbrow museum cafeteria are shocked by the size and configuration of the penis of a huge naked giant who is peering in at them through the window. At the same time the air outside is reacting to the giant’s endowments by lifting up her skirts to reveal her own.
The parable is called "The Meaning and Value of Repression," and the air’s pudenda are referred to as "Galileo’s secret."
Monday Love responded immediately by posting:
"huge brown phallus pressed up against the pane"
Best image in poetry ever!
Monday
In quoting the Feb 23rd remarks above concerning the way in which he conveys the truth "nakedly," Expatriate Poet omitted Monday Love’s subsequent paragraph--which indeed may have been the reason why so many dislocations ensued in the following exchanges.
This is what Monday Love went on to say:
There is only one reason why I would clothe my argument in an additional argument, or 'poetize' my argument to you right now, and this reason is not a positive one, but a negative one; it is a reason entirely based on human fallibility. That is, if I feared you, or if I longed to deceive you in some way, or I felt that you would never understand or comprehend the essence of what I am saying, or if I wanted something from you, or felt overwhelmed by some emotion, or I was trying to impress you with word-play or rhetorical ability, only then, would I add to my writing any feature at all which is termed 'poetic.'
Monday
So there we have the problem in a nutshell. For Monday Love poetry is never more than "an additional argument" in an informed discussion. Poetic discourse is not only not a positive method of communication for Monday Love, but is based entirely on what he calls "human fallibility." In other words it is a lesser vehicle for those who are incapable of saying what they mean in plain prose.
Inferior, inadequate, incapable as it might be, the little poem "The Meaning and Value of Repression" is stating unequivocally that however BIG your discourse appears to be, there is always something else out there that knows how to deal with it even better than all that Mister Bluster!:oops:
So the battle lines are drawn now, and we know that Monday Love is going to go for the naked truth everytime. Indeed he very proudly asserts just above that there is in fact no other truth but the empirical/imperial dick--which is how men have always felt, I guess, and why women have testified since time in memorial they're so slow!
This is how Monday Love drew up the lines today.
Christopher,
I'm missing your larger point.
There is a "woman" in your poem which is meant to open up my eyes.
I am now in your doghouse because I 'poked fun at a girl.'
Are you talking about Aimee N. or the woman in your poem?
Could you be more direct?
I really do want to know.
Not all souls are enlightened in the same way. I'm afraid I may never be enlightened, but if you could help here, I'd really appreciate it.
Don't be polite. Let me have it.
Yours,
Monday
Dear Monday Love, sadly enough, poet/woman that I am, I can only let you have it yet again like this:
OLD FOREPLAY FOR NEW WOMEN INCLUDING MEN
O, how wrong you fierce suitors have it
stripping off the dark, secret wraps
that lighten length and breadth
and scenery on earth—
the furtive root grabs downward
only because great tentacles of hot
rival might lift our silt-lapped
limbs much harder still,
like sunlight
prying up the whole orchard's sap!
No, the weight of things is just
another flight,
like Leda’s modest thighs
giving plain wings the chance
to sanctify earth's godliest yearnings.
As the arrow by the playful string
the heady soul is ever fired by
the archly absent body—
draped arabesques of trembling skin
and shining pubis so defying gravity
even the most upright Jove
or holy Galileo
bearded like our father's angel
tumbles to the maiden yet again,
so hotly does the dreaming quiver
fletched in abstract plumage
hunger
even for a single pomegranate kiss
that scatters weight
like rubies!
I admire you, Monday Love, I really do—and I’d love to know who you are as well, with your big heart and fragile voice. Indeed, I feel sure you know exactly what I’m talking about but feel you must guard yourself at all costs against the possibility there might be nothing left to say.
You say speech lords it over writing—I say, speaking as a poet, true, but in much the same way that men lord it over women all over the world!
So here's the metaphor: I live in a part of the world where women have no rights at all, where domestic violence, including rape, is not a crime, where a man can take as many wives as he can afford but a woman cannot sue for divorce, even on the grounds of failure to contribute to the support of abandoned children, and where 75% of husbands are regularly in the brothels to boot, coming home with Aids as the prize. Yet ask any man, woman or child in this culture, who is control, Mum or Dad? Everyone knows the answer—and everyone feels sorry for the son.
And the irony of ironies is that you, Monday Love, good Son of Urizen that you are, can write with breathless ease about the delicious female "schtick," as you call it, in Aimee Nezhukumatathil's "Miracle Fruit," for example, or the masculine extravagances in Simon Dedeo's "GutCult" poems--yet you're tongue-tied before "Galileo's secret!"
Christopher
P.S. Dear Monday Love,
I could list ahead of time all the literalist reductios I know you will introduce to make what you will surely call my "arguments" look silly. You'll ask me if I'm suggesting that women read/write/talk about poetry better than men, for example, or that women are deeper/more spritiual/more perceptve than men, or that you have to be a woman to understand what I'm talking about.
My answer to all those sort of questions is simple, but it comes in two parts: firstly, in this day and age what I'm saying need have nothing to do with gender any more, mine, yours, or anyone else's. Secondly, and even more importantly in this post-modern quagrangle, I'm not making an argument but poetry!
If you want to answer you have to answer not me but the two poems-- because it's not about my schtick but their shlock!
C.