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Robert Perchan's avatar

Thank you, Peter. You hit the nail on the scrotum. And the scary thing is, I would probably do it all over again.

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Nicholas George Campbell's avatar

Fascinating account of being a writer/poet, Peter. Thanks for the link. I have saved passages from what I've read.

So much of you have shared has been among my experiences, though I have not received such accolades or awards, but then I am not one who has published much and then, only vanity publications because I know I would not fare well, as I had alluded to in my post responding to your post at Greg Boyd's Antifictions. I rather like being a nobody. A poet I know who is also nobody wrote a very short poem about what being a poet feels like and what he feels like after he has written a good poem:

46 PERCENT

Less my microbiome,

only 46 percent of me is me

and of that, how much is hoding this pen

and what can it do

but be, the king of the world?

George Burns

My friend, George Burns, writes many poems, and like me, a lot of poems that don't work, but as poet William Stafford once wrote, or maybe it was a comment by Ray Bradbury, about writing a good story, one has to write a lot of bad short stories to write a good one. I can't remember now who wrote "You're only as good as you dare to be bad." It may have been Ray, but I think perhaps it was my mentor, poet Benjamin Saltman, who said that. He has won two NEA Grants and other awards, and has published nine volumes of poetry, but I can't convince the Academy of American Poets or the Poetry Foundation to include at their sites any of his poems, not even a mention of him. I have sent both of these organizations all of Saltman's books of poems including his autobiographical, "A Termite Memoir," that, if I were teaching, I would assign as an example of how difficult a writer's life can be.

When I look back at what I have experienced to acquire the skills to write a poem, I become rather exhausted. I stumbled on what it means to be me. hence why I like George Burn's poem.

I have decided to save to my computer your complete "discussion" about what it means or is like to be a poet (or author of anything). I agree with what Robert Perchan wrote: "The scary thing is I would probably do it all over again." The question is, could I?

Nick Campbell

Below is a poem by Benjamin Saltman. Dana Gioia has characterized my continual support of Saltman's work this way: "You worry too much about Ben Saltman's readership." If I didn't, who would, certainly not his own family.

THE CURVES OF BRIDGES

Sometimes a bridge takes a leap

like the best ball I threw when I was twelve,

when I jumped from stone to stone

in fine arcs hanging from cables of air.

A bridge starts inside, the near shore

shrouded, no way to turn back, and then you’re gone.

A bridge wants to fire over the Bay

where steel points a gray finger at Yerba Buena,

a red finger at Marin. Few things go

across bridges normally, often they get excited

or start dreaming. A bridge stretches its rails

and trembles and takes off flickering at night

away from tired houses, even the good trees

on the near side. People leave the crowded day

hammered by radios, and launch themselves over water.

I am always on a bridge when I realize how far

below the water is, fierce, ribbed. I am on

that bridge like a long bird flying, trailing its legs,

and there is nothing in me that will stop.

Benjamin Saltman

from his book "Alone With Everyone."

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