1 / 9

Paul Haines

Paul Haines. Brad MacDougall. Life. Born in 1933. Vassar, Michigan Spent time in Europe, India, New York City. Settled in Toronto, Canada. Taught French, then made a career out of poetry. Had three children. Avery, Tim, Emily. Died in 2003. “Secret Carnival Workers” in 2007. Paul.

nemo
Télécharger la présentation

Paul Haines

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Paul Haines Brad MacDougall

  2. Life • Born in 1933. • Vassar, Michigan • Spent time in Europe, India, New York City. • Settled in Toronto, Canada. • Taught French, then made a career out of poetry. • Had three children. • Avery, Tim, Emily. • Died in 2003. • “Secret Carnival Workers” in 2007.

  3. Paul • Always wrote in capital letters. • Had a very abstract and avant-garde writing style. Mostly negative. • Hated spoken word poetry. • Collaborated with Carla & Paul Bley for “Escalator Over the Hill,” a very abstract jazz opera. • Only published one book of poetry in his lifetime. • “Third World Two” in 1981. • Very difficult to find information/resources about Paul. • Shunned the media.

  4. “Encore du Tutoiement” (for discussing & analyzing) Encore du tutoiement (Alwaysinformal) Inconnu (Unknown) Cette plus ou moins (This more or less) Grande concision (Great conciseness) Aspect de femme (Aspect of woman) Toujours sans but (Always without purpose) Précis (Accurate) Sauf but voulu (Except wanted purpose) Depuis si longtemps (Sinceso long) L'impossibilité de penser (The impossibility to think) À toi sans penser à nous (Of you without thinking of us)

  5. “Sprig” Fresh When sleeping meant Every other night Falling asleep for a fifth time Early in a morning Awake in terror Words staring back at him Never to be used Their hands On hold So quiet they could hear each other’s thinking Denying garnered interests Making of life a forged painting Life’s big magnet, tug tugging And listeners like you. [video]

  6. “Poem For Gretchen Ruth” Every living thing then Jumping up Nothing paying Attention Light crawling As slowly as ever Into his hammock Hung in mist As dry as moths Whose song Is sung as Weeping

  7. “Déjà Trop Vu” A tall white Pine stands Between me And the tree I’m trying To see Also A tall white Pine

  8. Creative Response Haze The fluid night Cannot comprehend All of the dreams that are wasted Hidden and hurried I shake with passion When terrors stir my mind Never leaves a bruise Inane and cold To one who could be listening to The morning Miles mumbling Falling asleep to grey thunder Time’s dulcet twinkle, tick- ticking And listeners like you.

  9. Works Cited • http://torontoist.com/attachments/toronto_carlyb/2007_08_27paulhaines.jpeg • http://books.google.ca/books?id=mtaRoO_seYIC • http://bp2.blogger.com/_DZ8VjNniFPU/SGFxwtEJZkI/AAAAAAAAAVo/ii0ShrZzp8o/s200/image+3.bmp • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Haines_%28poet%29 • http://www.pointofdeparture.org/PoD13/img/books_haines_to_you.jpg Thanks. 

More Related