YOU CAN’T GO WRONG HERE: HELPFUL BANANA BREAD AND OTHER RECIPES FOR LIVING

“I notice I keep saying this and this seems to be my theme. It is a philosophy of life. That if you do it, if you hokey-pokey it, put your whole self in, that is, your memories, your fears, your hopes, your irrepressible optimism and belief, your wistful love, your imagination, your hungers, your forgivable greed, you can’t go wrong. It will turn out all right. Like William Stafford’s poem, “Waking at 3 am”. I love poems that end with assurance: Rumi’s “Zero Circle”– “and we shall be a mighty kindness.”

–Barbara Mossberg, The Poetry Slow Down

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THE POETRY SLOW DOWN . . . DISTINCTION IN AN AGE OF THE HOLOCENE EXTINCTION

Lively Arts and Classical Poetry As Survival Schemes and Shenanigans . . .news from the Bard to Nietzsche to Dante to Star Trek, of the Clown, the Fool, The Witch, the Dodo—Us in the Poet’s Mind Writ Large and Personal.   

“We ponder what it is in a poet’s vision, as species extinction accelerates, and we wait for the other limb to drop, that not only is enduring, but necessary for each and all of us to endure, beyond survival, the reading of the daily news.”

Listen live at radiomonterey.com, Produced by Zappa Johns, podcast 24/7 at BarbaraMossberg.com, with Professor Barbara Mossberg, Sunday Noon-1 pm PST

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AN OXFORD-BASED POETRY SLOW DOWN

From 14th century Queen’s College, broadcast live for radiomonterey.com, produced by Zappa Johns, with Professor Barbara Mossberg, on the news we heed, the news we heed, the news “without which men die miserably every day” (William Carlos Williams, who knows whereof he speaks): poetry. We are investigating the phenomenon that what goes for “new” (and news) and genius is an amalgam and collision of old and older and older again, different ways of knowing and expressing from the past and other disciplines. Thus we find ourselves with Oxford exemplars, who each study Latin and Greek and arts and sciences, from STEMers Sir Christopher Wren reading The Aeneid and Lewis Carroll reading Oxford poetry to T. S. Eliot and the new Oxford laureate Simon Armitage, who, naturally, are engaging classical worlds and The Odyssey. We consider Joyce Cary’s The Horse’s Mouth covering William Blake, and Nancy Willard covering Blake, and David Lehman covering Wordsworth (who was an honorary at Oxford). Features of our show this week include the theory that the architecture of Wren’s St. Paul’s Cathedral and Eliot’s “The Wasteland” are the same “new” breaking-away works of genius and beauty, jazz, chaos (theory), and colliding amalgamation, that make today’s headliner Armitage seem positively . . . in the company of ancients, as Wordsworth would have us have it:

Where holy ground begins, unhallowed ends,

Is marked by no distinguishable line;

The turf unites, the pathways intertwine;

And, wheresoe’er the stealing footstep tends,

Garden, and that domain where kindred, friends,

And neighbours rest together, here confound

Their several features, mingled like the sound

Of many waters, or as evening blends

With shady night. Soft airs, from shrub and flower,

Waft fragrant greetings to each silent grave;

And while those lofty poplars gently wave

Their tops, between them comes and goes a sky

Bright as the glimpses of eternity,

To saints accorded in their mortal hour. William Wordsworth

Wordsworth is speaking of joy, which Blake makes “poetic,” and that joy from the beauty of poetry is something incandescent. Thank you for listening, in whatever time zone (our listeners span 15 time zones), and for the joy, as it flies . . . . (thank you Mr. Blake).

© Barbara Mossberg 2015

COME INTO ANIMAL PRESENCE—LIBERATE YOUR INNER VULTURE TRASH TALK/TRASH ANIMALS AND WHY WE LOVE THEM, WHY WE ARE THEM: A SHOW OF GRACE AND REDEMPTION ABOUT BEING HUMAN, THROUGH THE GIFT OF CONSCIOUSNESS, I.E., POETRY

Featuring Kathleen Dean Moore, Charles Finn, and ringleader Charles Goodrich, gathering a company of poets, with host Professor Barbara Mossberg for radiomonterey.com, Sunday live noon1pm, PST, produced by Zappa Johns  

Job 12:7-10 
“But ask the animals, and they will teach you, or the birds of the air, and they will tell you;  or speak to the earth, and it will teach you, or let the fish of the sea inform you.  Which of all these does not know that the hand of the LORD has done this?  In his hand is the life of every creature and the breath of all mankind.”

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