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Poetry, the imagination, and the creative life.

Saturday, June 30, 2007

If Only Bush had Read Poetry?

If Bush, who brags about being a non-reader, had paid better attention during his "Ivy League" education, he might have taken more seriously the lesson that history and literature teach: War is by nature destructive, senseless and almost always futile. War is death and devastation, not "shock and awe" as televised in murky blue shadows on flickering cable TV screens.

Our blissfully ignorant president obviously failed to read or understand the major antiwar poems found in almost every high school and college literature anthology.

Stephen Crane's "War is Kind" (1893) is one such poem. . . .
Posted by Peter at 7:26 AM
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3 comments:

Kelli Russell Agodon - Book of Kells said...

thanks for this link...

June 30, 2007 8:55 AM
The Sublibrarian said...

I'd like to think so, too, though I'm a little less sanguine about the humanities these days: Eliot's anti-semitism, Pound's Fascism.

The antiwar poem that has stayed in my mind all these years is Jarrell's "The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner".

June 30, 2007 11:15 AM
Peter said...

Sublibrarian: Yes. I am struck by that poem, too.

June 30, 2007 4:48 PM

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Poetry can communicate before it is understood. ~T. S. Eliot

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Poetry is nearer to vital truth than history. ~ Plato

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A poet's work is to name the unnameable, to point at frauds, to take sides, start arguments, shape the world, and stop it going to sleep. ~ Salman Rushdie

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Poetry heals the wounds inflicted by reason. ~ Novalis

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Poetry is what maintains our capacity for contemplation and difficulty. — Carolyn Forche

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Poetry must have something in it that is barbaric, vast and wild. — Denis Diderot

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Sometimes something wants to be said, sometimes a way of saying wants to be used. — Paul Valéry

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