Motist poetry in its strictest form adopts a categorical method for transforming from one idea to another, leading towards a deeper and yet interrelated understanding. This poem, the first and only poem I have written and recognized as typically Motist, eschews strict categorality in favor of an interpretive method more native to the poetic temperament. Each line was considered as the most sincere translation of the previous line, in terms of individual elements. The pretext-prelude, a concept borrowed from e.e. cummings, allows time to become comfortable with the context within which the poem is prefigured.
Each of the individual lines after the pretext is composed of three elements, each comparable to the corresponding portion of the shorter stanzas in the pretext. For example, "waves crashing" is translated into "flirtatious wave" in terms of comedy, and "destruction" in terms of tragedy. "Flirtatious wave" and "destruction" are then translated into "Flirting with death" for tragicomedy. In this way there is a logic, perhaps a categorical logic, to defining terms such as "tragedy" "comedy" and "tragicomedy".
That set of categories becomes a context for each of the lines in the remainder of the poem. "Flirting with death" becomes "brinkmanship", "expecting the worst" becomes "default", and "tragicomedy" becomes "familiar territory". The lines that follow then try to refine towards a notion of meaning more as an experience than as an abstract contextualization.
Always within the poem, "movement" forward becomes more important than the absolute rationality of any given statement. Yet interpreted specifically in the context of preceding or proceeding lines, it becomes more apparent how much is intended.
MOTIST POEM 1 modified from former post 6/14
PRETEXT/PRELUDE
waves crashing
or not crashing
the heart leaps
flirtatious wave
apprehension
this is comedy
destruction
desolation
this is tragedy
flirting with death
expecting the worst
this is tragicomedy
PART 1
brinkmanship default familiar territory
war peace deity
extremism reason answer themselves
madness the method of madness different things
singularity systems a ground for comparison
nature law compatible
self universe one
knowing becoming a knot
wisdom suffering intelligence
principle bleeding promise
soul revealing mystery
divinity past sight holy
gods infinitely good
archetypes immeasureably valued
meanings qualified by articulation
truth being intricate
motism living byzantine
mind sprawling labyrinth
reactor passages codex
heart verses secret
psyche written dark
wild annotated sublime
PART 2
liberated deep beauty
unfettered layers bloom
escaping onion flower
fugitive unity heady
lawless everything returns
laws are territorial again
justice categorical duplicates
order axes ennumerated
levels mapped hierarchy
existence concept ladder
book of qualities ideation transcendent
dreams history to walk above
heart story mind story heaven
parable theory answers
hidden truth, answers hidden, truth answers
secrecy scries socracy
hermeticism labeled rhetoric /evil symbolic (vis.
‘impressions’, ‘birth of distinctions and the
distinction of distinctions’)
metaphysics dubbed logical
philosophy declared reason
bookmanship swearing light
--Eucaleh Terrapin
i can't understand what the poem wants to imply!!!
ReplyDeletesoory,
but i'm only telling what i observe.
more powers!
Sorry for the long wait on a reply. The poem is a concatenation of a lot of different categories of ideas. It is less aimed towards a conclusion than the containment of many types of interesting containments. Some of the themes are Zen (waves lapping / not lapping / the heart leaps), whereas others are directly related to Modist or dimensional philosophy, such as the "truth being intricate...wild annotated sublime" which tries to connect pictures taken from philosophy into a literature, and hence, phenomenal context. "Laws are territorial again" is a direct reference to categorical philosophy, involving axes of comparison, which literally divide territories or categories. Evil is labeled symbolic because a high standard is set for the virtues of symbolism, e.g. almost all of symbolism is evil if there is only one concept of the good: one concept, in other words, 'the good' is the only good.
ReplyDeleteThe conclusion is kind of weak, but I like the rest of my poem.