I’m just realizing, I’ve written “after- Shakespeare, Keats, Coleridge, Browning, Poe, Carroll, and Auden” poems, but I quiver at the prospect of an “after Okaji” attempt!
Daniel’s tribute to you is so very brave and touching!
💜
i, for a long time lived in the shadow of those great men & was always trying to look for pockets in my poems to leave asides to their work, i never really got around to ‘after-‘ poems, but i definitely had them in mind, i think my list would be different, but certainly well known poets from centuries ago. But after getting into the contemporary mood it started to feel like relying on the past, living under its wing, wasn’t doing my generation any favours, it was hindering our identity. So now it feels much more valuable, even easier to do an after Okaji, because he’s here now, writing good, relevant poems to us living & experiencing this time. i don’t want to suggest we stop reading the greats, nor that we shouldn’t respect their addition to the history of literature, but that by looking to each other, by responding to one another, we go one step further to giving value to the great poets we have now. & of course opening dialogues in anyway, shape or form is another way, even ‘liking’ is taking part in its own way.
So creative – I love this 😊
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Much fun. Daniel is amazing.
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Thank you hot sharing 😊
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Stay tuned. Scarecrow replies to DPM tomorrow.
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Haha! Love that 😀
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I’m just realizing, I’ve written “after- Shakespeare, Keats, Coleridge, Browning, Poe, Carroll, and Auden” poems, but I quiver at the prospect of an “after Okaji” attempt!
Daniel’s tribute to you is so very brave and touching!
💜
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Ha! Daniel is a brilliant madman. Scarecrow responds tomorrow…
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i, for a long time lived in the shadow of those great men & was always trying to look for pockets in my poems to leave asides to their work, i never really got around to ‘after-‘ poems, but i definitely had them in mind, i think my list would be different, but certainly well known poets from centuries ago. But after getting into the contemporary mood it started to feel like relying on the past, living under its wing, wasn’t doing my generation any favours, it was hindering our identity. So now it feels much more valuable, even easier to do an after Okaji, because he’s here now, writing good, relevant poems to us living & experiencing this time. i don’t want to suggest we stop reading the greats, nor that we shouldn’t respect their addition to the history of literature, but that by looking to each other, by responding to one another, we go one step further to giving value to the great poets we have now. & of course opening dialogues in anyway, shape or form is another way, even ‘liking’ is taking part in its own way.
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A worthy tribute
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Scarecrow is everywhere. (K)
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I believe that Scarecrow travels more than I!
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But he finds a way to channel himself to you, wherever he is…
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For which I am grateful, Kerfe, as I often have nothing to say.
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“They also serve who only stand and wait”
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