A New Romanticism: The Collected Poetry Volume Two
Andrew Chavez provides a large representative sampling of the poetry that is part of his exploratory journey leading to the final development of his perspective called a new romanticism. Chavez turned to poetry because of intense revelatory experiences; those same revelations guide and direct his work. A reader is allowed an opportunity to follow the ups and downs, the misdirections, errors, and pitfalls that were part of the unique process of discovery. The poetry strives to be as direct, clear, and brief as possible. Chavez believes that a thinking mind with something to say has a natural melody to those expressions. The job of the poet is to say what needs to be said then stop. There is no law of poetry guiding length. A poem should be as long, or short, as necessary to say, tell, or show whatever needs to be said, told, or shown.
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A New Romanticism: The Collected Poetry Volume Two
Andrew Chavez provides a large representative sampling of the poetry that is part of his exploratory journey leading to the final development of his perspective called a new romanticism. Chavez turned to poetry because of intense revelatory experiences; those same revelations guide and direct his work. A reader is allowed an opportunity to follow the ups and downs, the misdirections, errors, and pitfalls that were part of the unique process of discovery. The poetry strives to be as direct, clear, and brief as possible. Chavez believes that a thinking mind with something to say has a natural melody to those expressions. The job of the poet is to say what needs to be said then stop. There is no law of poetry guiding length. A poem should be as long, or short, as necessary to say, tell, or show whatever needs to be said, told, or shown.
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Overview
Andrew Chavez provides a large representative sampling of the poetry that is part of his exploratory journey leading to the final development of his perspective called a new romanticism. Chavez turned to poetry because of intense revelatory experiences; those same revelations guide and direct his work. A reader is allowed an opportunity to follow the ups and downs, the misdirections, errors, and pitfalls that were part of the unique process of discovery. The poetry strives to be as direct, clear, and brief as possible. Chavez believes that a thinking mind with something to say has a natural melody to those expressions. The job of the poet is to say what needs to be said then stop. There is no law of poetry guiding length. A poem should be as long, or short, as necessary to say, tell, or show whatever needs to be said, told, or shown.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781467043816 |
---|---|
Publisher: | AuthorHouse |
Publication date: | 10/31/2011 |
Sold by: | Barnes & Noble |
Format: | eBook |
Pages: | 528 |
File size: | 1 MB |
Read an Excerpt
A NEW ROMANTICISM
The Collected Poetry Volume TwoBy ANDREW CHAVEZ
AuthorHouse
Copyright © 2011 Andrew ChavezAll right reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4670-4390-8
Chapter One
GOODNESS, HOW TIREDGoodness, how tired, old, and worn I feel.
I'd like to forget everything all together;
Wander away to a forest or desert plain
There to tend sheep or live the life of a forgotten hermit.
It seems that after a million steps
I haven't gone anywhere forward
So I laugh to choke back tears.
What am I to do?
My efforts lead to nothing;
My progress is a steady march of marking time.
What use to hasten my pace
If a flurry of activity only gains exhaustion
Without moving so much as an inch?
I could say tomorrow is another day
But that itself points to what I fear.
What's left but to trod along as I usually do
Despite the manner of my curious motion
While hoping that somehow things will get better?
IT SEEMS THAT NEVER
HAS A MAN LOVED
It seems that never has a man loved
Nor a woman been more deserving.
I have to divert myself with a tale,
Yes, it's of a woman, and beautiful
Far beyond those babes of yore; indeed,
Those others, although poets lauded them yesterday,
Today they suffer a grave defect, true,
They are dead, yet this one that I talk of
Is alive and willing. Willing to what?
Why, to be called on, to spend the day with a guy,
The night, too, but there she's wary
Saying an easy love forgets easily,
But she makes nothing easy, her motto: aloof,
And yet, for accessibility she's like sunshine;
Like the very air all engulfing, supporting, and encouraging
But invisible walls are erected around her
To guard against a too vociferous or hands-on admirer.
I think she means to drive me crazy
Being a world of contradictions: soft yet rough,
Kind but mean, easy and difficult, promising but denying,
With come-on beauty that flares dreadful fires of doubtless doom
Whenever I try to get closer.
This ferocious tenderness, dark light,
Brutal civility, and hopeless dreaming
Has me submissive and rebelling.
WHEN I WALK INTO
THIS TERRITORY
When I walk into this territory
I'm still not fully aware of what to do
So I try myself here by wandering over the grounds
Merely to get a feel for the place with my own two feet;
I speak to hear the sound of my own voice
Testing whether there's an echo or if my voice falters,
Cracks or becomes gruff, or strains toward high or awkward
pitches.
Strolling, I get to know what my surroundings are
In the way of forests, lakes, pastures, rivers, and hills;
I find out what birds, snakes, insects, cattle, coyotes, and people
Are living in this domain.
What am I saying but that this land seems like new
Although I've wandered here many times
And return whenever I'm able?
If Thoreau had his Walden Pond
And Whitman his Leaves of Grass
Then here I claim my own terrain
And call it my Progressively Changing Prairie.
IN BROOKVILLE
I was reading in my study;
I kept hearing laughter
So I got up and looked through the front door
And out across a large field across the street;
There, two girls, both about ten years old,
Were climbing on the large blocking equipment
Used by the local high school football team.
They were climbing the upright columns,
The tall padded portions,
And when they reached the proper height,
The structure would fall forward.
The girls screamed and laughed as they fell down.
Once on the ground
They stood the equipment back up into the ready position
And did the whole thing again.
I WAS WORKING AND LIVING IN
COFFEYVILLE
I was working and living in Coffeyville at the time
But kept my usual apartment in Manhattan
And once during a regular visit from Coffeyville to Manhattan
I learned that it was Band Day
And that bands from around the region
Would soon be marching down mainstreet.
I found a spot to watch the parade and waited.
The first band started to march down Poyntz Avenue
And was followed by another; then another.
They were high school bands from all over the state
And were dressed in full regalia;
Some of the bands were large and expensively dressed
While others were very small and wore slacks and T-shirts.
I enjoyed watching and listening to them all.
I knew those people; lived and worked in their towns
From Wamego to Downs; from Topeka to Marysville.
I noticed each town banner and recalled each one pleasantly.
Come now, poet, surely you can sing as lively
As those bands played for you.
Tell how their spirited tunes set your heart throbbing;
How you couldn't stand still
Except for those times
When the band's strict precision of rank and file
Froze you into admiration.
Tell how difficult it was to silence
A great shout of joy and approbation
And how you were constantly choking down tears of excitement.
Mention their brightly-colored uniforms;
Each band wore the same set of colors that were offset
By the different colors and glittering fabrics of the twirlers
Who marched ahead of the band
In sparkling red, blue, green, or purple costumes.
Talk about the attractive young girls
Who marched carrying pompoms, banners, and flags;
Speak of those girls strutting in high-step fashion;
Include the band instructors who marched nervously
Alongside their band with hands keeping time
And sometimes mouthing-out silent cautions or corrections.
No sooner did one band pass in review than another approached
Proudly displaying upfront the banner showing their town of origin.
Tell how often, as the bands marched along, they'd pause
So the twirlers could display their talents of agility, control, dexterity,
And eye-delighting showmanship;
Don't leave out the flag-girls
Who high-stepped while working their synchronized routines.
Talk of all the alluring pep-rally girls
Who stepped along precisely together
Wearing outfits designed to inspire admiration.
Drummers kept a steady marching beat
Until the brass raised their shinning instruments
And began to fill the air with exciting music.
It was easy to see how the band members
Enjoyed performing for the large and appreciative audience
Who watched and listened in much the same state of mind
As the poet who fought back tears, could not stand still,
And longed to shout his pleasure at the whole spectacle.
TONIGHT I WENT TO A RODEO
Tonight I went to a rodeo in Coffeyville.
Kathy went along with me.
The stands were full of people;
Even all the extra bleachers were full.
The announcer introduced himself and welcomed everyone
Then the grand parade began.
Horses of every size, shape, and color strolled out into the arena
One right after another until the whole arena
Was covered with horses that walked, galloped, and strutted in
line.
The riders belonged to riding clubs, were rodeo hands, and
sponsors.
Once the arena was cleared
A woman shot out of a chute on horseback.
The woman rode free-reigned while carrying the flag
Of the rodeo's main corporate sponsor.
I can still hear the pounding hooves that kicked up chunks of dirt
While the flag flapped and snapped wildly in the wind.
As she rode around, the sponsor's name was announced
Along with information about the sponsor's activities
In Coffeyville, Kansas and around the nation.
I enjoyed watching the woman ride.
She rode a beautiful chestnut quarter horse
And rode him well. She, too, was very attractive
And probably selected for both her beauty and riding skills.
The rodeo went very well.
The bucking horses were good
And the bulls large, mean, and muscular.
The show at intermission featured a buffalo trainer
And his buffalo that weighed over a thousand pounds.
The trainer explained how buffalo are supposed to be untrainable
But he made the buffalo do a lot of tricks.
The buffalo knelt down on both knees,
Moved forward and back on command,
And allowed the trainer to ride him like a horse.
After the trainer rode the buffalo around
The buffalo jumped on the back of a pickup truck
With the trainer still on his back.
The pickup then drove the mounted trainer around
While the trainer smiled at everyone
And waved his big white hat.
LET ME PLUNGE
Let me plunge myself into these waters
Because they attract me like a native element.
It's senseless to stroll along the shore
Touching the diminished waves with a dainty foot
While I long to immerse myself
Deep and fully into its fluid body.
IT'S THIS
It's this, these very lines here that I've longed for.
It's this that I've worked hard to have
And traveled many miles to see.
It's this that has kept me awake at night;
This that made me fidget and forgetful
While I worked through the day to earn a living.
This that explains the mysterious behavior:
The aloofness, the sudden departures, the explosive rages;
The erratic seeming routes taken
That only from afar can be seen as straight and steady.
This that puts the gleam in the eyes
And the eager, happy rush into the voice.
This that gives the heart a lively beat; pounding rapidly.
This that makes the mind swell with various conceptions,
This, that seems so simple and ordinary.
This, these, and them,
Are the very lines that I've always longed for.
MY DAYS ARE MOSTLY DULL
My days are mostly dull and uneventful.
I have a set of routines that moves me through the day,
A set that prompts me through the night,
And one that takes me to bed, and then,
I wake up and start the whole thing going again.
WALKING THE STREETS
OF MANHATTAN
Walking the streets of Manhattan
I paused to look at a brick road
And thought of the men who laid it years ago.
I could imagine the scene with the exposed and compressed dirt
Where stacks of bricks were scattered around for ready use.
I could see the red and yellow flags where engineers and
surveyors
Kept straight lines and denoted manholes or where pipes were
laid.
I saw the men working, some with their shirts off,
Their backs tanned and glistening; some wore shirts
Soaked with sweat as they kneeled down, set bricks,
And tapped them with their wood or rubber hammers;
Then set more along a string line.
I could see the loaded trucks,
Some parked and being unloaded,
Others drove off for another load.
I could hear the clank and clatter of tools,
The tapping of bricks, and the roar of engines;
The laughter, shouts, and the joyful banter, the cussing
Of men working near to one another.
The scene was busy with men; the work was labor intensive.
Some men worked ahead of the bricklayers
Cutting out the ground, grading, rolling the dirt down hard
To meet specifications for compaction;
Some are pouring concrete for drains and manholes.
Carpenters hammer forms; others saw lumber.
The foreman explaining a problem to the supervisor.
There are elderly men looking on.
Children here and there attentively watching.
The bricks were new.
They glistened and shined.
The air was clear;
The trees green; so were the neighborhood lawns
Lining the stretching job site.
I QUESTION MYSELF
I question myself in such a manner
That I succumb to conventional cautions and criticisms
Saying that modern songs cannot be composed.
Why not? I am modern. I write songs.
Why can't the two worlds be brought together?
As a matter of fact, I'm already doing
What cautions and criticisms say can't and shouldn't be done.
I know where all the negativity comes from.
It's part of the critical and now canonical literature
From both modernist and postmodernist pages.
Blast all that! Their instructions are meant
To guide modernists and postmodernists.
I am neither.
I am a new romantic.
I write and sing modern songs
Having nothing to do with current limits or restrictions.
I am not about making things new
And thereby self-imprisoning myself.
I am about making things old, older, and older still
Until I have what is most ancient of all.
TO WALK, STROLL, OR ROAM ABOUT
To walk, stroll, or roam about, that's my proper element.
These muscles filled with nervous energy: restless, fretful;
Always urging and prodding, prompting and encouraging.
I slip into the night burdened with a heavy fog and get lost,
But I'm not lost. Fog confirms what would be found;
What is worthy of finding and having.
Lost, found, it's always a matter of how you look at it;
What you are ready and able to see,
What need requires and ambition gives courage to grasp and own.
Groping, striving; never satisfied yet content, confident
Despite being doomed to frustrations, disappointments, and
failures.
Often seeking solitude where I try my tongue
And play with various thoughtful and musical exercises;
Feeling my powers rise and fall.
A novice, always a student; always learning, listening,
And wanting more. Trying out new found potential
And talking about what I've learned.
The beauty of it. The thrill and frustration.
The wonder as I feel myself gathering depth and rising
Into domains new and refreshing.
I'm humored sometimes that I've grown up on the plains
Away from the great centers of culture and sophistication.
If I meet a cow on one of my strolls then that's nothing unusual.
If I hear coyotes yelping or see an owl flying low over a pasture
Or hear an eagle cry-out and say hello
Then I don't have to think anything about it.
A possum might cross my path; I pause and let it go.
Among the rolling hills, the tall grass pastures, and small towns
I hear subjects calling and saying
How they like to be entered into my poetry.
I'm hailed, cajoled, assailed, and seduced
But I act hard to get.
I don't commit myself too soon or too widely.
Necessity says that I must choose with caution;
Different kinds of laws are at work.
I attend and watch; wait for the feel of the affirmative.
Natural powers flow or explode
Grabbing immediately what is wanted or needed.
There is no choice involved; no decision on my part;
Thus, and thereby, I sing what is often unsung
Simply because too often it is unseen, unknown,
Unfamiliar, and not infrequently, unwanted
By those who cling to curiously contrived agendas.
I come onto this stage prompted by powers greater than any we use
In our factories or laboratories; greater than industrial might.
Brought to awareness by the wind,
Taught temperance and control by the seasons,
Instructed by the rivers about eloquence, reflection, and flow
While mountains, forests, and valleys taught harmony,
Grandeur, strength, and adaptability;
The stars lectured about philosophy, cosmology, physics, and aesthetics.
I leave myself walking, talking, and proceeding
From one place to another.
I know that I often walk in circles; I'm surprised that I do
But accept it all as natural circulation.
When the time is ripe and when I am ready
There is a voice that comes to straighten me out.
I trust myself; I trust nature and my natural reserves.
I often walk in fear among new territory
But I know that I am empowered and supported
By forces, powers, and might that has no equal.
Out of my mouth, and flowing from my own energy centers,
Are culture and sophistication enough
That I need not worry over what is stored in assorted buildings.
Pour me full and light me bright enough
To have my moment of self-sustaining illumination
And I can be at peace; content
While others share and gain the same powers
Simply by being close
Like people surround a nighttime fire.
I am not about making it new.
I want to be old, older, and oldest
Until I am among the most ancient of all.
What is most ancient of all is my working material.
No, I will not constrain and imprison myself
With tight compact language
That struggles to create a novel phrase
Or seemingly new, modern, and provocative scene.
Mine is the descent down into the deepest darkness;
There, sudden and strange, current and modern
I shine with the brightest light;
I am illuminated by an ancient splendor.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from A NEW ROMANTICISM by ANDREW CHAVEZ Copyright © 2011 by Andrew Chavez. Excerpted by permission of AuthorHouse. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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