Between the Night & Its Music
A.B. Spellman
between the night & its shadow is the music
between the music & the night is the song
between the song & the music is the voice
between the voice & the music is the self
between the self & its song is the mind
between the mind & the song is the melody
between the song & its melody is the rhythm
between the rhythm & the melody is the mind
between the mind & its song is the word
between the word & the mind is the voice
between the voice & the word is the thought
between the thought & the voice is the self
between the word & the self is the shadow
between the shadow & the self is the light
between the light & the word is the music

(the song is the melody in the word in the rhythm
the self holds the mind to the word & the thought of the song
the voice in the song sings the self to the mind
the light lights the shadow of the voice & its melody
the rhythm moves the self through the dimming night's song
the thought in the song is of night's shadows without music)
from the book BETWEEN THE NIGHT & ITS MUSIC / Wesleyan University Press
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The thing that I love most about writing poetry is that it lets me work sensually, intuitively, subjectively, imaginatively, with reason allowed no better than a tourist’s visa. Art is the discipline of the subjective.  Images, lines, stanzas feel right or wrong without objective standards. I can imagine night with all its baggage; I can hear music as an aspect of night;  I can see the shadow that is the dread darkness of night as an interloper in this image; I can hear the song that defeats the unwanted shadow. Well, why stop there? The voice is the agent of the song or perhaps it is the other way ‘round & the self substantiates the voice, etc. Everything is nature & so connects everything else. There never is a conclusion to any aspect of creation. Except that we require ourselves to conclude & so the parenthetical stanza. These lines are summary, I suppose; they explain in their way, they make the central image "turn" as the portraitists use the word.  & then the last line takes us back up into the poem, as is natural.

A.B. Spellman on "Between the Night & Its Music"
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