America’s leading review of the arts and intellectual life
NotebookApril 2005 The interior of a heron's egg: Michael Donaghy, 1954-2004 On the death and legacy of the poet Michael Donaghy. Once I heard a well-known poet grumble when faced with the prospect of following Michael Donaghy onstage. The poet didnt offer an explanation and didnt have to. Those in earshot simply understood that Donaghy abundantly possessed a skill lost to most of us: he was entertaining. I had the pleasure of watching Donaghy perform his poems multiple times, and from what I can gather these performances were representative. Right away he distinguished himself by reciting his poems, rather than reading them from the page. Ignoring the podium, he would step unassumingly to the front of the stage and begin talking. Those familiar with his work know that he relished a chance to blur the boundary between fact and invention. Thus, at the beginning of a reading it might dawn on a listener, after some impossible statement, that the wryly decorous tone coming from the stage wasnt introductory patter but a monologue. This article is available to subscribers and for individual purchaseSubscribe to TNC (Print and Online editions) Subscribe to TNC (Online only) This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 23 April 2005, on page 77 Copyright © 2008 The New Criterion | www.newcriterion.com http://www.newcriterion.com/articles.cfm/the-interior-of-a-herons-egg-michael-donaghy-1954-2004-1315
rate this article for your user profile
E-mail to friend
|
Subscriber login
Subscribe today
Print & Online packages Available
Already a print subscriber? click for online access by Ben Downing Remembering the Persian expatriate and London editor of the Paris Review. Ionesco & the limits of philosophy On Le roi se meurt by Eugène Ionesco and the philosophy of Owen Flanagan. New from The New Criterion: ‘Free speech in
EventsJanuary 25 2009 TRAVEL EVENT: The New Criterion Cruise Webcasts
The Milt Rosenberg Show: Free Speech in an age of Jihad
Roger Kimball on liberalism's response to Islam
Encounter Books at 10, an interview with Roger Simon |
add a comment
you must be a new criterion subscriber to post a comment. {subscribe now}