【teen anal sex with dog videos】
A Major Poet of Quiet
On Poetry
On Keith Waldrop.

Keith and Rosemarie Waldrop. Photo: Walt Odets.
Keith Waldrop is a quiet major poet, a major poet of quiet. His accomplishment is difficult to describe because his work refuses, in Bartleby-like fashion, the twin traps of impassivity and affectation: “On my one hand, / stasis – on the / other, striving for effect.” In one of his very few interviews, Waldrop says: “I think the worst fault a poem can have is striving for effect.” Waldrop never strives; instead, he haunts—his presence is all the more powerful for barely being there, like a ghost you discover in a familiar photograph. There are plenty of direct statements, moments of humor and pathos, but we come to know Waldrop most through his subtle, exquisite compositional decisions: the way he breaks a line or collages found language. I think here of the perfectly balanced epigrammatic poem “Proposition II”:
Each grain of sand has its architecture, but
a desert displays the structure of the wind.
I read the poem as a tiny ars poetica: Waldrop has composed two lines of eleven syllables each—syllables of sound/sand whose arrangement displays the structure of Waldrop’s thinking just as a drift makes visible the activity of the wind. We intuit the author from the architecture, from the traces he has left.
Ghosts are everywhere in Waldrop’s work, but they’re not supernatural occurrences: a ghost for Waldrop is more a felt absence than a felt presence. As he wrote in his brilliant autobiographical novel, Light While There Is Light—recently reissued by Dalkey Archive—“my ghosts merely disappear. I never see them. They haunt me by not being there, by the table where no one eats, the empty window that lets the sun in without a shadow.” In his first published book of poems, A Windmill Near Calvary, Waldrop echoes this sentiment: “The terrible thing about / ghosts is that we know they are not there.” That’s a fine shorthand for Waldrop’s gentle but rigorous skepticism: his poems explore the desire for something beyond the visible, and confront the nothing that is there. But that’s not just a journey of despair; it’s also a recovery of wonder before the actual world—each grain of sand, and the relations between grains.
In a poem in Windfall Losses—only now do I see the “structure of the wind” in Waldrop’s titles—he calls for a “phenomenology of ignorance,” and in part that’s what this volume is: a beautiful, delicate, and various exploration of the endless (and so objectless) activities of thinking and feeling, the truth always just out of reach. Activity over stasis, but ignorance over false effects. It’s rather surprising that Waldrop—perhaps the most erudite writer I know—should so often avow his ignorance, but that position of unknowing has allowed him to see and sound what would escape the perception of the more egotistical poet. Sometimes reading Waldrop I feel like I’m attending a séance. No ghosts appear, but the mundane objects—both the things words are and the things words describe—start to stir a little, start to glow. “Loved houses are haunted,” ends the poem from A Windmill Near CalvaryI quoted above. “And I have / no explanation.”
This essay appears as the afterword in Keith Waldrop’s Selected Poems.
Ben Lerner’s most recent book is 10:04. He received the 2014 Terry Southern Prize for Humor and is a 2015 MacArthur Fellow.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
The Price is Wrong
2025-06-27 06:29Photographer captures strange blue spiral of light in the night sky
2025-06-27 06:15Not How the Internet Happened
2025-06-27 04:16Wordle today: The answer and hints for January 23, 2025
2025-06-27 04:08Popular Posts
Broncos vs. Bills 2025 livestream: How to watch NFL online
2025-06-27 06:25Football Nation
2025-06-27 06:17The Teflon Con
2025-06-27 05:34Wrestling with the Demo(n)s
2025-06-27 05:30Featured Posts
Fuck The Vessel
2025-06-27 05:58What Happened in Vegas
2025-06-27 05:18The Uses of Édouard Louis
2025-06-27 04:40Best pizza oven deal: Save $150 on Chefman Indoor Pizza Oven
2025-06-27 04:28Popular Articles
E3 2017 Trailer Roundup: Upcoming PC Games
2025-06-27 06:31Solutionism for Students
2025-06-27 06:02The Searchers
2025-06-27 04:21Unlikely Journeys
2025-06-27 04:05Tips for Playing PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds
2025-06-27 03:52Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (756)
New Knowledge Information Network
PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds Mini
2025-06-27 06:32Follow Information Network
Turn Back!
2025-06-27 06:15Mark Information Network
American Scapegoat
2025-06-27 06:03Pursuit Information Network
Spoiler Alert!
2025-06-27 05:20Warmth Information Network
11 Tech Products That Were Supposed to Fail... But Didn't
2025-06-27 05:13