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Robert Lindley
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A few of my quotes over the years:

 

Listing A Personal View Of What Poetry Is

1. Poetry is a stone, turned to expose to searching winds of a once hidden earth.
Robert J. Lindley

2. Poetry is art, mind painted, heart colored and fire risen.
Robert J. Lindley

3. Poetry is a fruit, hanging on a bountiful tree, begging to fall.
Robert J. Lindley

4. Poetry is an ever expanding ocean, begging ever more creatures to swim in its swirling depths.
Robert J. Lindley

5. Poetry is cake on a golden platter, eaten with fork, spoon, butter knife or greedy hands.
Robert J. Lindley

6. Poetry is cherry blossoms, crying for the soft, cool winds to wave their beauty to the awaiting sun and the gasping skies.
Robert J. Lindley

7. Poetry is glistening dewdrops falling upon virgin ground to gift dawn's hope and night's desire to match brilliance of glistening moonbeams.
Robert J. Lindley

8. Poetry is a poet's heart and soul uniting to bless others, while temporarily shielding searching souls against this dark world's poison tipped arrows.
Robert J. Lindley

9. Poetry is brightly sent musical notes that heart sees, mind colors and spirit longs to record.
Robert J. Lindley

10. Poetry is ink blotted, soul driven splashes that cry to be read, beg to be understood and unabashedly sing to give to its dear readers.
Robert J. Lindley

11.Poetry is a colorful bird, in heavenly flight to a paradise that awaits man's sincere pleading heart and desirous spirit.
Robert J. Lindley

12. Poetry is a child happily playing, a mother joyfully singing and a father blessed to have and so very dearly appreciate loving both.
Robert J. Lindley

Robert J. Lindley, 7-17-2018
Subject, ( What Poetry Is)

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My biography will be very limited for now.   Here , I can express myself in poetic form but in real life I much rather prefer to be far less forward  I am a 60 year old American citizen , born and raised in the glorious South! A heritage that I am very proud of and thank God for as it is a blessing indeed ~

Currently married to my beautiful young wife(Riza) a lovely filipina  lady and we have a fantastic 7 year old son, Justin ~

I have truly lived a very wild life as a younger man but now find myself finally very happily settled down for the duration of my life~

I decided to rest here and express myself with hopes that it may in some way help others, for I see here a very diverse  and fine gathering of poets, artists, and caring folks~

Quickly finding friends here that amaze me with such great talent~~

I invite any and all to comment on my writes and send me soup mail to discuss

whatever seems important to them ~

A Blog On Life And Poetry.

Blog Posted by Robert Lindley: 8/29/2023 11:35:00 AM

a short story by Guillermo Manning

David Rattray, Contemplating the Fire (laidoffnyc.com)

The pain is gone. There is no illness in my body. I have left reality behind. The tumor that pressed my brain and prevented me from walking and writing just vanished. I can think again. I can see and feel the way I used to when I was a boy and I thought I could walk on thin ice, imagining it would never break.

Until it broke and I fell in cold water.

It happened in 1946 in East Hampton, the day of my tenth birthday, when my life in the world of living began. The organs inside my body screamed. The blood in my veins stopped circulating as my legs went numb. I could have died then but I didn't. I simply went down to tune my mind and learn how to adapt when the body is in free-fall, when the vessel of your mind's eye refuses to follow a vision, when the world needs to be born again. Listen to the mind when the body falls. Burn your eyes looking at the moon. Dance to Beethoven's Hammerklavier Sonata in the middle of the night. Read the poems written at the edge of reason. Listen to Pound and Mallarmé. Invent a life worth living. My eyes used to grow bigger when reciting Artaud. My hands violently held the pen while writing my diary and the poems I knew I would throw away. My legs broke the waves of the Pacific Ocean chasing Van's naked body—my poet friend. The pain is gone. I can see it all at once, everything covered in light: my hands, my legs, my eyes, the few verses I wrote and the ones I translated, the places I visited, the poets I met, the bodies I loved. I did my best to invent a new life. I leave everything to language now. The words that form my name will be my last.

David Rattray (1946–1993)

In 1944 I stood in the middle of the schoolyard and shouted moon, moon! The sky, illuminated by the sun, transparent and blue, could not hide the moon, which, at noon, was there for all to see, like an exile who refuses to disappear. Other kids followed me, shouting moon! The teachers looked up but didn't appreciate the revelation. They took the kids inside but they kept shouting moon! This went on for weeks. I had discovered that the moon and the sun can share the sky during the day. I became “Moon.” In East Hampton I wasn't Dave or David—I was Moon. Years later, I found meaning to my revelation: the moon is a Deity who abandoned us. This is an old Gnostic doctrine. Somewhere in my diaries I wrote that the chronological events we narrate rarely relate to the plot as the mind experiences it: I pointed to the sky but my mind's eye found a God, and in it I saw pain and pleasure, naked bodies suffering in love, abandonment, reunification, fire.

I have encountered many gods. That is the purpose of literature, to tell stories, have gods as characters, curse them and make them fuck. Think of Ovid and his Metamorphoses, the book that began my own metamorphosis. When I was at Dartmouth, I learned how to read Greek and Latin; then Jack Hirschman, the poet, my teacher ("In the beginning, I was soused with words…") introduced me to the work of Jean Genet, William Burroughs, and Antonin Artaud. During those days I participated in a poetry contest that Sylvia Plath won. I told a reporter that serious writing was not understood. Marianne Moore, one of the jurors, advised me to do something else for a living. Before leaving college, I met Ezra Pound at St. Elizabeth's Hospital. He had the pragmatic curiosity of an old man who has worked his whole life; he insisted he didn't read anything unless it would teach him something, but it was impossible to teach him anything. If you know the portrait Wyndham Lewis made of him, you've seen him the way I did, just older and more tired. My essay about Pound was well received. I started sending columns to the East Hampton Star. I went to France to become an academic. At La Sorbonne, I continued studying classics. I made the European aesthetic my own. I made French literature my map and road. I started translating Artaud. I went to Harvard and wrote about Proust. I was en route to becoming a prominent academic, one who looks at the world from a window, but Van stopped me…

…and I followed him.

Antonin Artaud (1896-1948)

Picture him swimming at a beach in Oaxaca. His heavenly thin and sick body jumping into the water. I pondered our place in the tradition of naked men who have shared the sea. We slept with prostitutes and were high in the middle of a place that claimed to be a port of angels—Puerto Angel. We stole marijuana, we read and wrote; we were slowly becoming invisible, and yet the body of Alden Van Buskirk remained fluorescent and decadent. We never learned how to transcend our mutual suffering. And during those warm Mexican nights I silently wondered who had stopped to think about the injustice of living in pain, who had rebelled against the imperfection of our organs, who had contemplated the fire in all its metaphorical magnificence?

Antonin Artaud.

Before we went to Mexico in 1961, Van was diagnosed with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria. When Artaud went to Mexico in 1936, he was carrying with him the consequences of the electroshocks he had received as treatment for schizophrenia; he was an alcoholic and a drug addict. Van and I met in St. Louis and drove to El Paso. We crossed to Chihuahua and went down to Oaxaca. Artaud arrived in Mexico City without any money; he lived in the streets and didn't die because a generous man, José Ferrer, saved his life. Artaud was looking for a new vision for mankind; in saving men, he thought, he could save Europe and the world. It doesn't matter if going to Mexico was my idea or Van's; we went there thinking we would stay for months to write, read, do drugs. Artaud went to the north of Mexico by train and rode a horse to reach the Tarahumaras in the Sierra—imagine Artaud riding alone, a broken rider who, like a prophet, carried the suffering of the world over his shoulders, thinking he was approaching a cure for his pain.

Alden Van Buskirk (1938-1961)

Van had blood on his mind. I had introduced him to the works of Artaud by giving him my translations and quoted him often: "to be somebody, you need blood." Artaud believed the world could be saved by reaching the magic guarded by indigenous cultures. Van believed in poetic license and the freedom it gives to act from moment to moment. I was twenty-five. In my diaries I call this time a belle époque. I quoted Swinburne, and whoever else came to mind. I thought about utopias and the eternal idea of creation. Van once told me that my European aesthetics had no place in America. He called Puerto Angel the edge of America, and from there he wanted to jump. I'm not sure where. In a poem, he wrote: "Death will be my final lover / I give her all." It is not clear for how long Artaud stayed with the Tarahumaras, perhaps a month, but versions change, people claim he stayed there longer, six weeks, six months. We know he couldn't see the Peyote dance because the shaman wouldn't allow him to. However long he stayed, he never stopped writing about what he saw during that time until his death. Again, the mind’s eye doesn’t follow chronologies. We were in Oaxaca for only three weeks but I wrote hundreds of pages about those days. Artaud did not find the cure for the world. Neither did we. He went back disappointed and his solution became more radical—he wasn't a socialist or a surrealist; he hated capitalism the same way he hated communism. There was only one way to save us: burn it all.

When we went back to San Francisco, Van and I parted ways. I cared too much for him. I wanted to save him but he didn't want me there. I wandered in Kansas and St. Louis, moving weed from one place to another. Van and I continued our correspondence but we never saw each other again. I have quoted this letter before; he sent it before dying: “I am ready to come back to you. I have lived my life a million times over in a few hours, seen everything, know too much, and now burnt out, want only love and peaceful madness of America as seen and shared with your eyes…” He was twenty-three. I didn't write about his death. It happened in December, 1961. I edited his last poems. That was the end.

The world is ill. There are no gods or devils, no heroes, no prophets, no heavenly beings asking for litanies and hymns. Listen to the mountains the way Artaud did. Don't ask other poets to read your verses when you're young. Feel the anger running down to your feet, and from your feet to the floor, and from the floor dripping like blood to the center of the earth, then let it erupt. Dream the eruption. Anger touches every nerve. I have heard prophecies of the beginning and the end; they say our days are a brief moment in time: there’s chaos, then life, then nothing.

New York City’s Five Spot

I became invisible. People would see me wandering the streets on the Lower East Side late at night. I liked the Five Spot on Cooper Square (Van had introduced me to jazz) and Les Deux Megots on East 7th Street. I married Carolyn; Mary was born. I published an anthology with the works of Artaud and witnessed how he was portrayed as a depraved crazy person. They never took him seriously. I translated people who had lived the way I had—poets who had searched in languages for a new life. To translate, you must be transparent and play the words of the writer the way an actor plays lines from a script; you have to surrender your projections and desires. Here is René Crevel on love: “Hands pressed against hands, palms wedded palms. Pierre shuddered and then was nothing but a droplet of blood transfused into another life's bloodstream.” Here's Roger Gilbert-Lecomte on life: “Life, in order to exist, needs absence more than it needs reality. / Life occurs between two nonexistences: past and future.”

At the end I built a house—a poet's house—in Amagansett. I went there to die after a doctor found a tumor in my brain. I had just published my first collection of poems. I was looking forward to having more time in the world. I tried to write. I tried to keep walking next to the sea. One day, as I entered my studio, everything went dark. From the corner of the room I saw a light growing. Then I blinked and saw the room on fire, an intense white glare. And I saw my life repeated in front of me a million times, like Van had described it, and every time it repeated itself I would see the same light at the end, the fire emerging from a corner to burn it all. This fire will save me, I thought. My organs released their tension and my mind saw my body collapsing.

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Just some o my current researching and reading.RJL 



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Date: 8/30/2023 12:51:00 AM
Robert thank you for sharing Mr Manning's story. I love how you bring to us exceptional Poetry and stories that are so wonderful to read and learn of. You pick the best and share the best and it is always a delight to see such beautiful works. God bless you my friend and thank you again for sharing...
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Lindley Avatar
Robert Lindley
Date: 8/30/2023 6:13:00 AM
Thank you, my good friend. Yes manning and others are indeed very famous for a valid reason. Their talent was massive my friend. God bless you,
Date: 8/29/2023 5:53:00 PM
I have just come across your recent blog this morning, which I have read on the road between appointments, I will return later to read in earnest, more thoroughly. But this, "Dance to Beethoven's Hammerklavier Sonata in the middle of the night. Read the poems written at the edge of reason. Listen to Pound and Mallarmé."...so much of what he writes, I relate to. I am more familiar with Artaud, a truly complex character and beautiful mind. I wrote a poem around my thoughts on Artaud, some time ago now. We can learn from the greats and see and feel, with empathy, some of our own characteristics within the lives they lived. Thank you for sharing Lindley. I will have a more thorough read later.
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Lindley Avatar
Robert Lindley
Date: 8/31/2023 8:56:00 AM
Myself, I have read and studied over a hundred famous poets. I even read those that their poetry to me seems kind of off! But years later I read them and I got it, I understood, and that was because I HAD LEARNED. God bless.
Lindley Avatar
Robert Lindley
Date: 8/31/2023 8:54:00 AM
Why not educate oneself by studying the greats from those eras? Is it vanity that many poets think it is not a good idea? I've talked with poets that admit they never do it, and 90% of those their poetry itself shows they don't.
Lindley Avatar
Robert Lindley
Date: 8/31/2023 8:51:00 AM
I find it sad that so many poets refuse to read the famous poems by much older famous poets. My view is there is a massive amount of great poetry back there in the past. And those poets did poetry right! Shelley, Keats, Byron, Browning, Longfellow, Emilty Dickinson,
Labyrinth Avatar
Lady Labyrinth
Date: 8/30/2023 3:14:00 PM
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippe_Beck). [https://web.archive.org/web/20110211031643/http://www.egs.edu/faculty/philippe-beck/biography/ ]. Some people might say, they don't get it at all, but I took something away with me from Beck’s more contemporary French musings last night. The poem I wrote about Artaud, is titled, "Angel Eyes". Isn't it intriguing how some of the most talented are tortured. Even comedians are some of the most tortured, but oh, so relatable for many. Don't get me started on de Sade. I am sure he had a few limericks under his belt. https://www.poetrysoup.com/poem/angel_eyes_1495011
Labyrinth Avatar
Lady Labyrinth
Date: 8/30/2023 3:14:00 PM
"Snow"/Philippe Beck (French, b. 1963) https://www.poemhunter.com/poem/snow-217/
Labyrinth Avatar
Lady Labyrinth
Date: 8/30/2023 3:14:00 PM
"Forest"/Philippe Beck (French, b. 1963) https://www.poemhunter.com/poem/forest-42/
Labyrinth Avatar
Lady Labyrinth
Date: 8/30/2023 3:14:00 PM
"Reversability"/Philippe Beck (French, b. 1963) https://www.poemhunter.com/poem/reversibility/
Labyrinth Avatar
Lady Labyrinth
Date: 8/30/2023 3:14:00 PM
The more poets I have read, both French and other more approachable poets (of other nationalities) - who in one way or another, distance themselves but share invaluable insight into who we are as 'human' and 'humane', point us in the direction of contemplating our own conditions, purpose and worth. Of course some writers/poets will turn their back on the classics, or more darker contemporary writers/poets, with their own thoughts on life. Writers and poets are not gods, they are merely human when you get down to the blood and guts of it. Some are more fragile than others. Of late I've been reading Philippe Beck (French, b.1963) his poems, which I read last night "Forest" drew me in (obviously) and after reading "Reversability", “Snow”, again read last night, it made me think, how some of us equate better to others' thoughts, closer than we could ever imagine.
Labyrinth Avatar
Lady Labyrinth
Date: 8/30/2023 3:14:00 PM
I gravitated towards the French poets, Classic and contemporary, around the time I was 17yrs old and on-and-off, up to present date, so I am familiar with quite a few of them. It was the romantic notion in me to see what all the hoo-ha was about with the French poets. I fast learnt that most poets are sad creatures, as well as philosphers (backyard or mainstream). Most poets, in one way, or another are driven by Love, the lack of it, the searching for it, the giving of it, the turning of one’s back on it, the softness and brutality of Love and life. The Passion of it. Then the inevitable written narratives through poetry, on the contemplation of what comes after all that...
Labyrinth Avatar
Lady Labyrinth
Date: 8/30/2023 3:13:00 PM
This blog of yours Lindley, one of the most interesting, I have read. Thank you for sharing and it certainly prompted me to venture forward and explore more, the mechinations of other writers/poets (Machiavellian or not).
Lindley Avatar
Robert Lindley
Date: 8/30/2023 6:12:00 AM
Thank you, my good friend, read my other blog for more. I posted two informational blogs for readers here to read and learn from. God bless you..

Previous Blogs

 
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Date Posted: 9/25/2023 6:28:00 AM
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Linked article on 19th Century Poets
Date Posted: 9/18/2023 3:33:00 PM
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Date Posted: 9/9/2023 12:35:00 PM
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Date Posted: 9/7/2023 7:53:00 AM
Words On The Need For And The Benefits Of Dark Poetry.
Date Posted: 9/5/2023 6:28:00 AM
The Fifth Poet, in my famous Poets Series, John Keats
Date Posted: 8/31/2023 1:19:00 PM
A Blog On Life And Poetry.
Date Posted: 8/29/2023 11:35:00 AM
5 Writers Who Blur the Boundary Between Poetry and Essay "Poets are the Hoarders of the Literary World"
Date Posted: 8/29/2023 11:20:00 AM
Man, What A Delicious Gob-smacking Dream I Had Last Night
Date Posted: 8/28/2023 11:58:00 AM
Blog on , Thomas Hardy
Date Posted: 8/17/2023 9:26:00 AM
Blog, What Is Modern Poetry? by Alan Rankin
Date Posted: 8/12/2023 3:13:00 PM
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Date Posted: 8/5/2023 5:06:00 PM
Blog on next two poets chosen to be honored in my, Second Poets Tribute Series
Date Posted: 8/3/2023 7:00:00 AM
Blog On Coleridge, A Brilliant Poet That Every Poet Should Know
Date Posted: 7/26/2023 8:06:00 AM
3 poems and a prayer, O' yes from 1973
Date Posted: 7/11/2023 2:18:00 PM
A Blog on the magnificent poet Alfred Noyles
Date Posted: 7/10/2023 10:18:00 AM
BLOG ON Shelley Notes on Percy Bysshe Shelley's A Defense of Poetry
Date Posted: 6/30/2023 3:19:00 PM
Blog, Recently Written Words, Hoping To Revive My Poetic Spirit
Date Posted: 7/4/2022 4:38:00 AM
Blog, A Hebdomad Of Poetic Thought, Musings And Deep Internal Pain
Date Posted: 5/15/2022 9:20:00 AM
Blog, ( Ancient Times, Some Fragments And Poetic Memories )
Date Posted: 4/21/2022 7:24:00 AM
Blog,A Menagerie Of Verse, Rhyme, And Meandering Thoughts
Date Posted: 4/10/2022 8:20:00 AM
Blog- To write, to not lose my sole remaining small joy amidst this darkest sea, this horrendous cavern of epic pain, mournful loss and deepest of darkest sorrows … RJL
Date Posted: 3/7/2022 7:04:00 AM
Death comes to my beloved wife.
Date Posted: 2/27/2022 9:49:00 PM
Why I am away from this poetry site, Loss of my beloved Brother... God bless one and all
Date Posted: 2/19/2022 4:27:00 AM

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