the subject/object relation is the most common conceit or device in poetry. its prevalent form or incarnation is i/you...a relation that is paradoxically the easiest and most difficult from which to write. i/it is a similar relation, but is typically less emotionally charged.
object/object relations are a metaphysical abstraction, a layer removed from subject/object. the immediate result of writing from this relation is depersonalization (not an aspersion--depersonalization can be incredibly useful). you/otheryou is the most common object/object relation and is easily the most clear, as the you/otheryou conceit is itself a grounding, a point of entry into the piece as much as it is also a point of departure for the piece, and still very much indirectly invokes the subject/object relation: the piece arises out of the perception of the object/object relation and thus requires a perceiver in order to occur.
further abstraction (undefinedit/otherit) can occur in an infinite number of layers, each successively losing more grounding until the point at which there is nothing but abstraction, leaving contextlessness with no point of entry or proper approach. however, the subject/object relation still recurs insofar as the author is still related to the writing.
In different combinations, these relations are invoked to form infinite images on multiple levels of concreteness and abstraction. Each piece finds (or, perhaps, is an attempt to find) its own balance between these relations in discrete, unique combinations without ever fully being able to uproot or eliminate the subject/object relation. However, because the poetry itself is external to the poet and exists as an intermediary between poet and reader, the act of writing creates a further relation: reader/*perception* of author--not reader/author. the difference between the two is overwhelming but very well summarized in the Saturday Review by John Ciardi.
"Every good poet writes one more poem than his index shows and that is the total poem of all the others put together. In the total poem, every enduring poet leaves not only his words, his imges, his rhythms, and his forms but a voice that speaks him as an individual, his personality. That personality, however, is a created thing. It is not in the life of the man, it is nowhere but in his poems." -- John Ciardi.
there are infinite reasons to write, boundless points of departure, paths, and patterns. question grounding, play with words, accept challenges, notice all possible perceptions, perspectives, and relations. READ ALL THAT YOU CAN, write from the heart but let the brain learn to control the flow of blood. THERE IS NO RIGHT WAY TO WRITE but finding your voice is crucial. remember that you are not your poems, but your poems speak you in a way that you cannot.
"Poetry makes nothing happen; it is a way of happening, a mouth." -- W.H. Auden, In Memory of W.B. Yeats
poetry is a powerful form of expression and a tool for exploration, but at its root it is a musical art. Go paint the relations of all things with all the words in the world and never stop writing and learning.
object/object relations are a metaphysical abstraction, a layer removed from subject/object. the immediate result of writing from this relation is depersonalization (not an aspersion--depersonalization can be incredibly useful). you/otheryou is the most common object/object relation and is easily the most clear, as the you/otheryou conceit is itself a grounding, a point of entry into the piece as much as it is also a point of departure for the piece, and still very much indirectly invokes the subject/object relation: the piece arises out of the perception of the object/object relation and thus requires a perceiver in order to occur.
further abstraction (undefinedit/otherit) can occur in an infinite number of layers, each successively losing more grounding until the point at which there is nothing but abstraction, leaving contextlessness with no point of entry or proper approach. however, the subject/object relation still recurs insofar as the author is still related to the writing.
In different combinations, these relations are invoked to form infinite images on multiple levels of concreteness and abstraction. Each piece finds (or, perhaps, is an attempt to find) its own balance between these relations in discrete, unique combinations without ever fully being able to uproot or eliminate the subject/object relation. However, because the poetry itself is external to the poet and exists as an intermediary between poet and reader, the act of writing creates a further relation: reader/*perception* of author--not reader/author. the difference between the two is overwhelming but very well summarized in the Saturday Review by John Ciardi.
"Every good poet writes one more poem than his index shows and that is the total poem of all the others put together. In the total poem, every enduring poet leaves not only his words, his imges, his rhythms, and his forms but a voice that speaks him as an individual, his personality. That personality, however, is a created thing. It is not in the life of the man, it is nowhere but in his poems." -- John Ciardi.
there are infinite reasons to write, boundless points of departure, paths, and patterns. question grounding, play with words, accept challenges, notice all possible perceptions, perspectives, and relations. READ ALL THAT YOU CAN, write from the heart but let the brain learn to control the flow of blood. THERE IS NO RIGHT WAY TO WRITE but finding your voice is crucial. remember that you are not your poems, but your poems speak you in a way that you cannot.
"Poetry makes nothing happen; it is a way of happening, a mouth." -- W.H. Auden, In Memory of W.B. Yeats
poetry is a powerful form of expression and a tool for exploration, but at its root it is a musical art. Go paint the relations of all things with all the words in the world and never stop writing and learning.

