
C. K. Williams
Williams' biggest theme is suffering, especially from those outliers of society: the homeless, the dispossessed etc. He explores their plight, but shy’s away from pontificating. He is a philosopher without a system, merely content just to tell us a story. I get my narrative drive from him. There’s no single anthologised poem Williams is known by (maybe The Gas Station). My personal favorite being the poem She, Though from his 1993 collection Some of The Forms Of Jealousy, a twelve page epic, about a pseudo artist, and the couple they attach themselves too. It’s a poem about inspiration and sacrifice and off course jealousy. It reminds me of another blissfully bleak story in Michael Donaghy’s poem Black Ice And Rain. There’s nothing I can take out of context from She, Though without wrecking it, so I’m going to close my eyes turn a page and bring down my finger: 'I’d believed that art was everything, the final resolution of all my insecu- rity and strivings. Now I realised that in attempting to create a character in art, someone who would live for art, I’d turned away from something in myself, some lapse I hadn’t glimpsed, and, more shocking still, I knew that architecture, poetry, and painting weren’t the self-containing glories I’d imagined, but that they, too, could have evasions lurking in them, grievous cosmic flinching from reality. Art wasn’t everything, nothing could be everything, but more crucially, art needed you:' Needing art, I flip the book to another favorite.Jamie. Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook