ESSAY: GABRIEL FINE ON LINDA GREGG'S PROLIFIC VISION "Gregg enunciates her doctrine: the poet 'is supposed to look' not just at the beautiful but also at the awful. It’s a strange vision of paradise, a beauty that encompasses ugliness—not pleasant but rather a state of pure consciousness. In paradise, you are wholly awake to the world, to the real. You can see it."via LOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOKS |
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"The poem is ultimately more about what isn’t there (the plums, the speaker, respect for the beloved’s property) than it is about what was there momentarily (the sensual pleasure of something “so sweet / and so cold” or the speaker’s remorse, however genuine)." |
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