Sunday, March 30, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Sunday, Mardi 30, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Raab: Passionate about the poetry, not the explanations Be careful Witt PROFI LEThere are ba inthe woo( h fire: C .S. I i t r r; a S By MARY LONG ' Horizon and another, The Col-r IT WAS A bad day for poetry lector of Cold Weather, is on readings. The weather had the way. He's received continoal turned back into winter and at a support from grants and endow- few minutes past four in the ments . since the day ne left afternoon poet Lawrence Raab Syracuse University with a Mas- was eyeing an audition dotted in ter of Arts in Creative Wri-ing. isolated spots with little hand- He's in Ann Arbor as a mem- fuls of people. ber of the University's So iety Just a second ago, English of Fellows, to give guest lec- professor Bert Hornback h a d tures and readings. He's not a glanced at his watch and said in teacher - his job is writing .soft reassurance, "I've only poetry. what things mean or are sup'- posed to mean" he says pa- tiently. "A sense of mystery has to be kept in poetry. After all, poems don't draw merely on what you can see or say. They come from the memory, from the subconscious, from dreams. These things have power, of course, when you use them in poetry. But the power remains mysterious, right?" It really isn't a question. He's "The materials of my dady life" he says simply. "'One views life as a person, not as a writer." got six after four, Larry" and Raab had nodded hopefully, ................................................ casually lighting a cigarette in appreciationqof time to spare. R member t your But at a quarter past, when "Reme b rthat y u poetry has a the attendance was no better, the cigarette hit the floor and life of its own. A writer can return to Raab whispered cheerfully at Hornback, "I'm gonna go aheadwok rei tu td and start" and nearly bounded his workto beinstruced by it. A good to the lectern. old poetwas all smiles, strid-lpoem," Lawrence RDaabsays, his dark ing near the front of the audi- torium like a big likeable cag- woolen scarf flapping in the cold ed bear, shaking hands, blush- ing a little at compliments, ano-'w n ob e i .ther cigarette jabbed solidly in March wind that robbed him of his the right corner. of his mouth.1 OUTWARDLY, he looks dis- audience, "a good poem knows more armi n g- blue jeans and a thick baggy white sweater, a than the poet knows." balding head ending in d a r k fluff, a build that would delight a fight manager and round owl-.:.:.....: ......................:::::,:": : .":.;:.:.;.> .. : .. . . .. ish eyes behind glasses that are perfect circles. But when he PUT EVEN with this status sold on it. All of Raab's work speaks Lawrence Raab is very: as a profesional poet, he expounds this need for a sense much the artist of mystery, al- will do anything to avoid cues- of wonder about self-expression. most inaccessible. tions that smack of "artiness" .He has always hated being porn- Not that he doesn't have rea- Someone mentions "the poetic pous or obvious about poetry. son to be pretty sure of him- experience" and he looks like he Years ago, when searching for self. Pick up any of the pres- wants an aspirin. Even asking a definition of his own art for tigious magazines: The N e w about his work causes him to himself, he turned to painters Yorker, Harper's, Esquire, The shift slightly in his chair and and musicians rather than Atlantic - and you will find glance around as if he were dy- writers, believing that o t I r poems by Lawrence Raab. Dou- ing to be anywhere else. types of artists, being less ob- bleday has published one book "Listen, I don't want to be sessed with the sound of their of his poetry, Mysteries of the explaining, even to myself, own words, would ultimately be _- ------------ more truthful. j "Listen to what Renee Magrit- c 3i . r r r' .; r ,f r 4 BUT PERSONAL experiences are not the only sources for his poetic gristmill. Des- pite their generally "low brow" reputation, Raab is crazy aboit , horror movies. In addition to' writing a libretto based on Dra- cula, his first book of poetry, Mysteries of the Horizon co i tains two marvelous poems nar- rated by eloquent vampires. "It's not an obsessin, reallT it's not" he laughs. "It's just that these horror movies sudden - ly occurred to me one day as being tremendous possibili- ties for material. I was stru~ck by certain statements in these films. When you are workin n ' a poem with a fictional sitim- tion that the audience is famil iar with, you can play off their , expectations - give them a dif ferent perspective that can be so important. Like, for exam- ple, -" he says, and after think- ing a moment, quotes the last lines from a poem based on the film Attack of the Crab Mon- sters: "Sweetheart, put down your flamethrower / You know I've always loved you". When you laugh he nods sage- ly and his hands punctuate the air with brisk little karate chops as he says eagerly, "You see? You laugh, but out of t h a t laughter a recognition comes, right? You understand that the body of the poem was solemn, it dealt with a lack of welcome, of sound, a lack of abiding life. Dai° But the last line was silly, a convention of the movies that do some things with language you were expecting. It was a re- that you wanted to do. thaz you lief and you laughed. I atemot knew you could do. end ihen, to be amusing but disturbing. sometimes, you surprise yoar- Under the humour something a self. At the point that you fin- little darker is happening. Thal ally give it up, sometimes you sneakers' feeling for the girt is have written things you don't genuine - the degree of emo- quite know the source of, ac- tional truth is strong." complished something strangely Raab prides himself on bing beyonddwhat you thought you a stickler for truth. H-e is could do." haunted by the invasion of false- If Raab were inclined to cx- hood into a world of beauty pounding absolutes, which he's and truth. This belief and fear not, he'd claim the secret to all lends an eerie atmosphere to his this creativity lies in being open work. to as many experiences as pos- "You know when something sible. Also in learning to see vou have said is true" he says things clearly and to continua~lv quietly, "and it must be true find new resources in those for you and for the world of things that once moved you. your poem. As a truth it takes on its own voice -- it separates lJE'S WRITTEN words like from you . ." that countless times - in He halts, fingers drumming poems, in prose, in response to the bony edge of the chair, tos questions. And he says the~m tappingyon the carpet. He has again now, checking those three moved into that shaky area of points off on his hands. poetic rhetoric that he dislikes "Also - it's important to be so intensely and he ends qoick- attentive to the possibilities of ly: "If what you say in a poem different voices" he says, jab- is truth, it stands alone, you bing an instructive finger in needn't explain it". your direction. I I 1 4 I I Phone Numbers ; Circulation 764-0558 ; Classified Adv. 764-0557 II Display ,Adv. 764-0554 News 764-0552 Sports 764-0562 ;- --mm CLIP AND SAVE ..... """ CLIP AND SAVE "" .... t "Love, thy 9 enemy"l This is a religious precept that challenges the mind. Love my en- emy when I can barely deal calmly with my in-laws? Yetthis hard say- ing has validity in a world where even a small act of violence has such unforeseeable repercussions. Scientific advances have heighten- ed our mutual vulnerability. Only love andnon-violence cansustain us. We may concede violence is in all of us. So is, God. Try His way. It works. Get together with your family, friends, neighbors, or co- workers to discuss the problems of violence and how you can work to- gether to help solve them. For a helpful discussion guide and fur- ther information write: Religion In American Life, 475 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017. Play an active role in your community TAT1 and help show the way. ,ELCIONINAMEICAN UK The community of Go. Make it your way lv Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI own. A writer can return to his work to be instructed by it. A good poem" he says, his dark' woolen scarf flapping in the cold March wind that robbed him of his audience, "a good p .) e m, knows more than the poet knows.'" READ and USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS JERUSALEUM DINNER Navy Bean Soup Cous-Cous Pilaf Stuffed Eggplant Mideastern Salad Matzoh Date Yogurt INDIAN SUMMER te, the Belgian Post-Impression- ist has to say about creation" he explains. "He's not self- conscious. You can't be self- conscious and write poetry that3 holds emotional truth. Y o u stick to literature and don't re-' late the arts to each other and you'll be sealed up in literatu:e, overwhelmed by it." [E IS VERY intense but he has been made to speak like the inspired artist and it is a: role that makes him squirm vio-I lently. So, after talking for a, moment about which poets he turns to when he has difficulty writing ("someone like Yeas is too overwhelming . . . 'I go t: Mark Strand, W. S. Merwin, to the contemporaries . . ."), itj becomes obvious that he has had it on the subject. He pushes back the sleeve on the white! sweater a little, as if he is about to tackle a hard daysj wash, and says: "Look. Therej are matters you just can't af- ford to know too much ab'mt. You can't program yourself asI a poet - saying, you kn w, 'I'll read this author when I can't find an idea' or 'I draw i an influence from so-and-so'. I believe it's a danger to think like that." He admits he takes "a lot of notes" in hope of getting a poem started. His materials? TODAY at 3 & 8p.m. "A JOY! NEIL SIMON'S BEST PLAY YET." - Clive Barnes, N.Y. Times EDDIE ARNY BRACKEN FREEMAN HCIKMN"5 NEW COMEDY Professional Theatre Proqrom MARCH 28-30, 1975 POWER CENTER Eves. at 8 p.m.; Sun. Mat. at 3 p.m. Advance ticket sales & in- forrnation- PTP ticket office. i 'I~r I I' Ue #o I I' I I rI COLLOQUIUM: ""LATIN AMERICANS IN STRUGGLE" auiI SUN[ PAZ in concert ,"' '"The Music of 'JIc. Latn America" SUN., MAR. 30-8 P.M. M L 3-$2.00 Sponsored by the Group on Latin American Issues MLaiPZZZA& VALUABLE COUPON 1 $100 of Any Large or Extra-Large Pizza I with one or more items OFFER GOOD THRU MON., MARCH 31, 1975 769-8030 U ONE COUPON PER PIZZA - - m m m m m m m - -111 m m /7fft s. After 4 p.m. 315 S. State St. u 1- _T ____ _ _ _ _ __ _.__.. _ r !3 I 1 ICI I i I ; ' THE POET admits he's been having trouble writing late- ly and though he hasn't panick- ed yet he is suffering a kind of continual disappointment. "I haven't written a p oe m' since last September and hat's a long time. I've been working on the manuscript for The Cd- lector of Cold Weather and :hat has been satisfying. But I mts the fun of writing poetry. Writ- ing is great fun for me - the initial stages are discovery. You I M rndcI frhnlobby, t 313 OPEN I P.M. TODAY Mneson3 I 7640450.. T ic kets also available at Hudson's Briar- BILLIARDS and wood. BOWLING PINBALL and FOOSBALL at the UNION "But most of all, remember that your poetry has a life of its I' o0 00 I' ~ a .. i li ., 'x . #' t, r :Yi wmmwm i =Mom I I! S -r T I lid' )r I . I OFFICE HOURS CIRCULATION - 764-0558 COMPLAINTS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS 10 a.m.-4 p.m. CLASSIFIED ADS - 764-0557 IQ a.m.-4 p.m. DEADLINE FOR NEXT DAY-12:00 p.m. DISPLAY ADS - 764-0554 MONDAY thru FRIDAY--12 p.m.-4 p.m. Deadline for Sunday issue- WEDNESDAY at 5 p.m. I ::« ' ;' tY ! ; : rr . I iF I I yearbook time avi® . .n