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authorCase Duckworth2015-03-25 21:49:45 -0700
committerCase Duckworth2015-03-25 21:54:26 -0700
commitecda49e0b20ad3bd52449356dccf2f8095ecfb70 (patch)
tree4789dd035fa827edf280fd8234d014b171de1c38 /words-meaning.txt
parentFix makefile re: RIVER crashing (diff)
downloadautocento-ecda49e0b20ad3bd52449356dccf2f8095ecfb70.tar.gz
autocento-ecda49e0b20ad3bd52449356dccf2f8095ecfb70.zip
Flatten directory structure
All content files (*.txt, *.html, *.river) are now in /.
I did this to simplify the compilation step, and to make
linking easier.  I'm still thinking about whether I should
move the contents of js/, img/, and lua/ into /, or into
an 'assets' folder of some sort.  We'll see.
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1---
2title: Words and meaning
3id: words-meaning
4genre: prose
5
6project:
7 title: Elegies for alternate selves
8 class: elegies
9 order: 4
10 prev:
11 - title: And
12 link: and
13 next:
14 - title: On seeing the panorama of the Apollo 11 landing site
15 link: apollo11
16...
17
18"How astonishing it is that language can almost mean, / and frightening that it does not quite," Jack Gilbert opens his poem "The Forgotten Dialect of the Heart."
19In a similar vein, Hass's "Meditation at Legunitas" states, "A word is elegy to what it signifies."
20These poems get to the heart of language, and express the old duality of thought: by giving a word to an entity, it is both tethered and made meaningful.
21
22Words are the inevitable byproduct of an analytic mind.
23Humans are constantly classifying and reclassifying ideas, objects, animals, people, into ten thousand arbitrary categories.
24A favorite saying of mine is that "Everything is everything," a tautology that I like, because it gets to the core of the human linguistic machine, and because every time I say it people think I'm being [disingenuous][].
25But what I mean by "everything is everything" is that there is a continuity to existence that works beyond, or rather underneath, our capacity to understand it through language.
26Language by definition compartmentalizes reality, sets this bit apart from that bit, sets up boundaries as to what is and is not a stone, a leaf, a door.
27Most of the time I think of language as limiting, as defining a thing as the [inverse of everything][] is not.
28
29In this way, "everything is everything" becomes "everything is nothing," which is another thing I like to say and something that pisses people off.
30To me, infinity and zero are the same, two ways of looking at the same point on the circle---of numbers, of the universe, whatever.
31Maybe it's because I wear an analogue watch, and so my view of time is cyclical, or maybe it's some brain trauma I had in vitro, but whatever it is that's how I see the world, because I'm working against the limitations that language sets upon us.
32I think that's the role of the poet, or of any artist: to take the over-expansive experience of existing and to boil it down, boil and boil away until there is the ultimate concentrate at the center that is what the poem talks around, at, etc., but never of, because it is ultimately made of language and cannot get to it.
33A poem is getting as close as possible to the speed of light, to absolute zero, to God, while knowing that it can't get all the way there, and never will.
34A poem is doing this and coming back and showing what happened as it happened.
35Exegesis is hard because a really good poem will be just that, it will be the most basic and best way to say what it's saying, so attempts to say the same thing differently will fail.
36A poem is a kernel of existence.
37It is a description of the kernel. [It is][].
38
39[disingenuous]: likingthings.html
40[inverse of everything]: i-am.html
41[It is]: arspoetica.html