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Monthly Archives: December 2012

How to Bait a Writer

31 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by elainestirling in Writer's craft

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Elaine Stirling, essay, imagery, inspiration, metaphor, prose poem

school-of-glass-minnows-florida-keys

For those dry, cold winter mornings; dripping, foggy afternoons; evenings that provoke and taunt you with another wasted day, “Hah, you call yourself a writer—give it up, just go to bed and toss and turn a big ole useless hole into your mattress!”, I offer these small tips.

First off, forget the words! They aren’t coming, snotty little boogers, never will, and sit up straight and tall. Sneakily, grab hold of pen or e-device and shout—out loud, for real, is best—”I’m telling. Do you hear me? I’M TELLING!!!”

Remember how good telling used to feel?

“Bobby McEvoy farted in gym today.”

“Did you see Philly-Mae’s slip was showing—in church? It looked kind of yellow, had a rip in the lace . . .”

While words ungrateful may pack up and run away, we never lose the knack for telling, though some of us, we had our tongues-of-telling shamed and stapled to the front pew, damned to Sundays near perpetual of puritanic sermons from an adenoidal preacher who would never die ‘cause neither God nor Satan wanted him.

I used to dream of Mystic on those awful—really, they were aweless—Sundays in Connecticut, consoled by pastel images in Victorian parlours with bowls of butterscotch hard candy congealed to amber lump, that whalers harpooned blue backs gently and floated them to shore like Afghans, golden placid on a leash. It made for better fantasy than sulphur being hurled in flaming chunks at those of us who managed—God knows why!—to find a way, through all the wrath, to be born anyway.

So here’s the tip that hides the iceberg of an endless creativity:

Ignore the words when they refuse to lead, and pay attention to the images, the smells, the sounds, and capture them in nets. How tight or loose the weave is up to you. Are they of hemp these nets that make you want to smoke them, or of prickly cactus fibers, or of woven plastic packaging, recycled?

Of your ocean, what’s the temperature? South Pacific calm or crashing, north Atlantic blustering? Do you dive deep and naked, or would you rather surf through endless roaring corridors?

The mainsail is, the main thing, that you write your choices down—to tell, record, the biggest, fattest lies of truth sweet-soaring through your blood and bones until you’re fairly shouting with the effervescence that is telling you. The bubbles stirring up attract an audience, they do, they always will—

Oh, look, what’s this?

Who’s tiptoeing, all curious, forgetting to be coy—haha, I tricked you, koi!—to netted edge and bringing with them buckets of emotion, sleek and silvery like minnows, courting, pregnant, spilling out with eggs? Those tiny fish, they are your prodigals, lost words come home in infinite and succulent supply to feed the hungry images you care enough to write…

You care enough to write. You always have, you always will.

So there you go, dear mystic friend, enjoy the feast! I’ll see you in the ocean blue when next we sail, distressed and wailing, on a dripping, foggy afternoon.

© Elaine Stirling, 2012

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Resolution

31 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by elainestirling in Poetry

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Elaine Stirling, form poetry, New Year 2013, pantoum, resolutions, time

image from www.torontoist.com

image from http://www.torontoist.com

A Pantoum

Be it resolved there is no time
to fret for anything I wish and love to do
and hope to change within this freshening life
is greater than the past I choose to know.

To fret for anything I wish and love to do,
confusing rank with new, a backward mask
is greater than the past I choose to know
if all I see is trouble in those other days.

Confusing rank with new, a backward mask
worn inside out against my face
if all I see is trouble in those other days,
I miss the downhill fun of sliding time.

Worn inside out against my face
an uphill crawl, for what and whom?
I miss the downhill fun of sliding time
so watch me turn this sled around, yahoo!

An uphill crawl? For what and whom
and hope to change within this freshening life?
So watch me turn this sled around, yahoo!
Be it resolved—there is no time!

~~~

© Elaine Stirling, 2012

Conversations with a Lumberjack in a Yukon Bar

28 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by elainestirling in Poetry

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

attitude, detachment, Elaine Stirling, joy, narrative poetry, timelessness, tradition, values

Gull River, Minden, the last river drive, 1929

Gull River, Minden, the last river drive, 1929

He loved Mark Twain,
owned a full set of Kipling
though I never saw his cabin
or the back of his head. He sat
at a table near the pot-bellied stove,
the only customer, shuffling and
fanning a worn deck of cards to
chase the arthritis from his
blue-knuckled hands.

His eyes were button black
and bright, features like oak
burl from a burned-out forest.
He scared me a little, the way he
stared, but a twitch of the barkeep’s
chin told me wusses weren’t welcome
in these parts, and what did I have to lose
that was so god-almighty precious? So
I bought him a Jim Beam, hot chocolate
spiked with same for me and asked
if I could join him.

Most of what we talked about, the
lumberjack and me, is not for me to
share, but some things he said to write
verbatim because I would forget, pretend
I never heard, so here they are.

***

None of us is blind, not really, but our long
distance vision and capacity for surprise
are limited to the dimensions of the raft
we build and ride from tedium.

Hack away at the back and sides of your
belief in life’s beauty for too long, you’ll be
leaping from moment to moment in dread
like a frog in the log chute of a cyanide river.

Sure, the world’s polluted, but nowhere’s more
than between your ears, where the negative builds
with no place to go, sucking in more of itself.

The news you spread, if it’s larded with misery,
will clog your heart faster than a shipload of bacon.

Most of my friends and none of my enemies
died that way, and they’re still gimping around
holding in the good and the hopeful, relieved to
be a little sicker every day, but not too much,
so as not to vanish from the conversations
of men and women altogether.

Whatever chased you here to find me
at the end of the world is the same
mother lode that’ll lure you back.

Sure, those laugh lines, they’re gonna
set deeper, but you’ll forgive the things
that made you rush and will always
look pretty when you blush.

And when you finally meet that
friend of yours, you know the one,
remind him to make the most of what
you see in one another, or next time—
I’m not kidding—it’ll be me who comes
a-courting with violets tied in yellow
ribbon and a fresh rainbow trout.

© Elaine Stirling, 2012

A Trio of Triolets for Mary

27 Thursday Dec 2012

Posted by elainestirling in Form Poetry

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

early feminism, Elaine Stirling, free love, Mary Wollstonecraft, medieval French poetry, triolet

What tenderness has caused in me
to flee the streams of love divine?
Appropriate to destiny
what tenderness has caused in me.
Our hearts though bruised can well define
the shortest paths to harmony
what tenderness has caused in me
to flee the streams of love divine.

"Weakness may excite tenderness and gratify the arrogant pride of man, but the lordly caresses of a protector will not gratify a noble mind that pants for and deserves to be respected." Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1798) Portrait by John Opie

“Weakness may excite tenderness and gratify the arrogant pride of man, but the lordly caresses of a protector will not gratify a noble mind that pants for and deserves to be respected.” Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1798) Portrait by John Opie

I care no more for his caress;
it lords from him with subtle guile.
He gathers women to impress,
I care no more for his caress.
Grown weary of his morbid style,
what need have I of loveless stress?
I care no more for his caress;
it lords from him with subtle guile.

Now those of us with noble mind
we tumble free and sweet in bed!
Our waking hours by joy refined,
now those of us with noble mind
we have no fear of what is said
in confidence again we find,
now those of us with noble mind
we tumble free and sweet in bed!

© Elaine Stirling, 2012

You can learn more about triolet, the medieval French poetry form, here.

Crenelated Man

26 Wednesday Dec 2012

Posted by elainestirling in Poetry

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

dysfunctional relationships, Elaine Stirling, inner voice, poetry, traps, trust

Harlech Castle, North Wales

Harlech Castle, North Wales

I knew a man who for a piece of peace
of mind did sell the language of his heart
to his embattled self who wants and gets
then wants it not and now he marches like
a sentinel in epaulets and brass
around the outer ring he wears to keep
encroaching women from the places where
he hurts and thus in exile keeps himself
aloof, a donjon tower with a view.

This male Rapunzel, fairy tale reversed
lusts for the darkling princess whose despair
in eloquence expressed appeals, in hopes
she might from his imprisonment unspring
his wintry heart and free him like the harts
of old to leap through wooded dells and chase
the virgin and the innocent again
for crenelated man knows naught but on
and off, of open, closed, and thus he’s locked.

You’ll know you’ve met the man of whom I speak
when in his presence you experience
a weakening sense of beauty, losing words
that once came easily, the smile that lit
your eyes grows dim, convinced you are that what
he doesn’t want from you is what you lack.
It is a trap of shadows that no light
can penetrate; the battered ram must find
his own release; he has the means, not you.

And scarce attention pay to those who crowd
his cold abode, they are the moat, well stocked
the bait that feeds the memories of his wounds.
Upon your road ahead keep both eyes fixed;
the language of the map within your heart
will see you safely through, the fates they will
refashion all you learned from him who taught
you prison’s way, and in the brightening dawn
you’ll smile to hear the free man’s joyous song.

© Elaine Stirling, 2012

Love that Gathers

25 Tuesday Dec 2012

Posted by elainestirling in Poetry

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Christmas, creche de Noel, Elaine Stirling, nativity, poetry, surveying

creche de Noel from blog de magcrea, www.magcrea.artblog.fr

creche de Noel from blog de magcrea, http://www.magcrea.artblog.fr

Love that gathers is the same
the love that sets us free. the
spinning lowly tales of peace
the city, house of bread is
Bethlehem, to panem angelorum
demonium
of pan gives way
the all, the mighty sides in perfect
harmony with choirs, inquiring to
the highest brightest star, the ever
lasting means by which to bring
and measure tri-fold lives
theodolites, we track the coming
three dimensions opening to four

and surely love that gathers here
with optics clear enough to reach
the furthest, the remotest heart
convinced of loneliness has soul
enough to know we set each other
free by holding light the better facts
and letting bitter go, the myrrh, the
frankincense, the birth and burial
they are but imitations scoping
greater love, the incorruptible
that shines from you, full visible
to me, like gold.

© Elaine Stirling, 2012

A Storyteller’s Christmas

22 Saturday Dec 2012

Posted by elainestirling in Poetry

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Christmas, creativity, Elaine Stirling, holiday season, inspiration, letting go of politics, poetry, trust, writer's craft

artwork by Leonid Ivanovic Solomatkin, 1863

artwork by Leonid Ivanovic Solomatkin, 1863

Friends in every corner,
in every dip and knoll,
the characters you’ve come
to love, the ones you’ve
yet to know…await you,
storyteller, in the vales of
Christmas time regardless
of the names you hang on
God the father, son,

for story does not circumscribe;
the crescent moon, the candles
lit, return of light belong to all of
us, and dialogue that’s truly spoke
the muses offer joyfully—agendas
and false claims, though, she will
nine times trample with more vigour
than those weary steeds of yesteryear
whose revelations cease with
every moment fully lived.

There is no greater danger here
nor will there ever be to storyteller’s
page than politics; it is the Herod
king, the tyrant of the writer’s
soul, desirous only of the murder
of your firstborn, tender words,

so banish all interpretation, friend,
your knee-jerk reflex, let the heralds
bring instead with angel voices
infinite the merciful blank page,
for given space, they’re fashioned
well to sing with you of fearless tales
whose twists and turns and frights
delectable will muster you to
boldly stand and say:

Get thee behind me, tragedy,
for I’ve a romance in the making
here—I’ll travel every word on
sleighs of ink and nib, discarding
with my happy wake the agitation
of your concretizing reigns of hell
while flow surfeits my veins and
carries me as lovers do to
snowy mystic realms;

and when the New Year greets
us with her precious infant smile,
we two shall look upon the wintry
hillsides where your audience, well
gathered, toasty warm with flasks
of chocolate and brandy, wait ready
to receive the story of the gladdest
tidings yet, sweet born and seated
on this noble Christmastide.

© Elaine Stirling, 2012

Hosting

21 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by elainestirling in Poetry

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Christmas, Elaine Stirling, good wishes, holiday greetings, poetry

Image from Leith's cooking school at bellenews.com

Image from Leith’s cooking school at bellenews.com

Come holidays, entertain the idea of perfection.
Serve it platters with tasty bits and give it your
comfy chair. Invite the reality of beauty; she brings
gift baskets with those tiny bottles of booze you never
think of buying for yourself and the kinds of jam you
love to sink your teeth into. Toast happiness, for he
too is a guest of honour, and he has rich friends:
mirth, merriment, wonder, surprise. And when
abundance, who caters these events for free, has fed
the hearts and bellies of all, seek out that love seat
in the corner beside the beeswax candelabra where the
quiet guest sits alone, saving a space for you. Put your
feet up, crack one more of those tiny bottles—no one
will care—and nestle deep into the open arms of peace.

© Elaine Stirling, 2011

Claim and Disclaim

20 Thursday Dec 2012

Posted by elainestirling in Poetry

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

caution, creativity, duality, Elaine Stirling, no fear, poetry, yin and yang

boxcar at Kent, Ohio, 1978, photographer unknown

boxcar at Kent, Ohio, 1978, photographer unknown

Claim and Disclaim live in a box
at the end of the tracks at the border
between Thislandia and Nolandistan.

One is tall, one is small, one is
light divisible, the other squints,
is heavier, can hardly see at all.

It’s hard to say from where I write
perched here upon this wooden stool
which one of them emerges first
at crack of dawn like Mr. Sampson’s
rooster, proud and strong. I’d like
to think it’s Claim. You see his arms,
the way they swing? His shoulders
squared, a happy tune upon his lips?
It’s Claim, oh, yes, it’s Claim,
it’s definitely Claim!

Thislandia, it is a busy place
with avenues and shops galore
to satisfy the cravenest and
never-ending jobs—well, some they
end but something always starts
again—to fill the hours. Claim, if
it be he, today works as a plower:
see him there, both hands upon
the shaft, sure-trudging, turning up
and out those perfect rows of toil.

Now, over there, just to the left
of Claim and Disclaim’s box on rails
Nolandistan hums quiet, growing trees.

Nolandistan is mostly shade, though dappled
bits illuminate from time to time, and things
we leave there never stay, the seeds we plant
dissolve the instant that we lift our hands.

Thislandians despise Nolandistan, or no—
despise is far too strong a word, they do not
like, and even that I shouldn’t say, for isn’t
that Disclaim now creeping out, and aren’t
we here together, you and me, to learn
the natures of our brothers in the box?

The figure leaps from stone to rail, from
lily pad to teasel stem and lands upon
his haunches like a mottled frog within
the bounds, from all accounts in safety,
of the dark Nolandistan.

I’ve heard it said he is the lazy bro,
too full of his own eptitude to bother
with the issues and the worries of
our time, though I don’t know if this
is true, for more and more I see
disclaimers tacked to claims made full
and bright, in honesty, with shadows
falling cross the smiles and furrows
deep upon smooth brows of good
and true Thislandians;

and since we never see the brothers
in each other’s company, catch glimpses
of the two in moments only far too fleet
emerging or returning to their box at dusk—
or is it dawn?—I cannot help but claim
the labours of disclaiming as the greater,
finding ways from over there, not here,
to say, but wait, what if, hold on,
I need to stop and think—

while off he struts, his arms a-swing, the
bolder, never caring, indivisible, Claim
staking and advancing toward the light.

© Elaine Stirling, 2012

Feathering Bits of Nothing Much

18 Tuesday Dec 2012

Posted by elainestirling in Poetry

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

acceptance, boredom, Elaine Stirling, momentum, reality, self-pity

Image from fiddlersfoundblogspot.ca, 2010

Image from fiddlersfoundblogspot.ca, 2010

Momentum builds in the trough
of the wave, not the crest, in the
depths of the ocean, not the
glittering turquoise surface.

Spend less time polishing
your opinion of things, people,
places, events like a servant
in the sub-basement kitchen of
someone else’s manor house,
and more time listening to the
shape and quality of the “no”
inside your head, and you
might become aware that
you’re polishing tin and
it’s wearing
thin.

Monotony, you say? asks
the Universe in majestic, ever-
granting wanting-to-be sureness.

Rub, rub, rub.

Very well then. rubrubrubrubrub
rubrubrubrubrubrubrubrubrubrub…

Our fear of invisibility may be
greater than our fear of death
and so to every thunderclap we
add our peep, lest we not be
heard, lest we be thought
less of, or thought not at all.

Guess what? Mama bird
stopped listening to our
cheeps long ago and
thunder doesn’t care.

The feathered nest we ache for
requires our leaving the fundament
that someone else constructed for us;

and if, after a respectable number
of circuits flown in all manner of sky
one cannot yet swallow that birds
and worms negotiate agreement
in their creating sustenance of
evermore, evermore, then it’s
best, I suppose, to learn to live
with being eaten.

© Elaine Stirling, 2012

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