Some of you know that I have an all-year pass to Masterclass, which means I can take any class I want without any restrictions. I’m also immediately informed when new classes are added. Over the last few years, I have taken several of these classes and enjoyed them a great deal. I say “have taken” but mostly, I watch the lesson videos and read the workbook. I haven’t decided yet to which one I’d like to fully commit, meaning doing the exercises and possibly submitting them and engage in a discussion with fellow writers. When you actively take the classes, you have the chance of receiving feedback from the teacher. This chance is especially high when a new class is uploaded.
Masterclass offers a wide range of classes for a very reasonable price. Some are writing classes, but not all of them. I’ll probably write another, more detailed post this month to tell you about some of the great content I discovered.
Last year, many new writing classes were uploaded, one of which was the course Reading and Writing Poetry by Billy Collins. Billy Collins was the poet laureate of the U.S. from 2001-2003 and the poet laureate of New York State from 2004 and 2006. I must admit, I wasn’t familiar with him but started the course out of curiosity and was immediately smitten. He’s such a lovely person and the way he teaches is very engaging and inspiring. You can see some of that in the intro I attached below.
In the course he reads many of his poems, explains the way he works, where to find inspiration. But he also talks about other poets and their work, since the course isn’t only about writing but also about reading poetry.
Discovering his poems was a joy. I like how so many of them have very mundane themes but with a surprising twist.
One of the poems he analyses is his own Elk Water Falls. Since this was my introduction to his poetry, I’m sharing it here.
Elk Water Falls
is where the Elk River falls
from a rocky and considerable height,
turning pale with trepidation at the lip
(it seemed from where I stood below)
before it is unbuckled from itself
and plummets, shredded, through the air
into the shadows of a frigid pool,
so calm around the edges, a place
for water to recover from the shock
of falling apart and coming back together
before it picks up its song again,
goes sliding around the massive rocks
and past some islands overgrown with weeds
then flattens out and slips around a bend
and continues on its winding course,
according to this camper’s guide,
then joins the Clearwater at its northern fork,
which must in time find the sea
where this and every other stream
mistakes the monster for itself,
sings its name one final time
then feels the sudden sting of salt.
Another one he speaks of in the course is this:
The Lanyard
The other day I was ricocheting slowlyoff the blue walls of this room,moving as if underwater from typewriter to piano,from bookshelf to an envelope lying on the floor,when I found myself in the L section of the dictionarywhere my eyes fell upon the word lanyard.No cookie nibbled by a French novelistcould send one into the past more suddenly—a past where I sat at a workbench at a campby a deep Adirondack lakelearning how to braid long thin plastic stripsinto a lanyard, a gift for my mother.I had never seen anyone use a lanyardor wear one, if that’s what you did with them,but that did not keep me from crossingstrand over strand again and againuntil I had made a boxyred and white lanyard for my mother.She gave me life and milk from her breasts,and I gave her a lanyard.She nursed me in many a sick room,lifted spoons of medicine to my lips,laid cold face-cloths on my forehead,and then led me out into the airy lightand taught me to walk and swim,and I, in turn, presented her with a lanyard.Here are thousands of meals, she said,and here is clothing and a good education.And here is your lanyard, I replied,which I made with a little help from a counselor.Here is a breathing body and a beating heart,strong legs, bones and teeth,and two clear eyes to read the world, she whispered,and here, I said, is the lanyard I made at camp.And here, I wish to say to her now,is a smaller gift—not the worn truththat you can never repay your mother,but the rueful admission that when she tookthe two-tone lanyard from my hand,I was as sure as a boy could bethat this useless, worthless thing I woveout of boredom would be enough to make us even.
And here’s another one I like a lot:
Central Park
It’s hard to describe how that day in the park
was altered when I stopped to read
an official sign I came across near the great carousel,
my lips moving silently like the lips of Saint Ambrose.As the carousel turned in the background,
all pinions and mirrors and the heads of horses
rising to the steam-blown notes of a calliope,
I was learning how the huge thing
was first designed to be powered
by a blind mule, as it turned out,
strapped to the oar of a wheel in an earthen
room directly below the merry turning of the carousel.The sky did not darken with this news
nor did a general silence fall on the strollers
or the ball players on the green fields.
No one even paused to look my way,
though I must have looked terrible
as I stood there filling with sympathy
not so much for the harnessed beast
tediously making its rounds,
but instead of the blind mule within me
always circling in the dark —
the mule who makes me turn when my name is called
or causes me to nod with a wooden gaze
or sit doing nothing on a bench in the shape of a swan.Somewhere, there must still be a door
to that underground room,
the lock rusted shut, the iron key misplaced,
last year’s leaves piled up against the sill,
and inside, a trance of straw on the floor,
a whiff of manure, and maybe a forgotten bit
or a bridle hanging from a hook in the dark.Poor blind beast, I sang softly as I left the park.
poor blind me, poor blind earth turning blindly on its side.
The Billy Collins collection I’ve got, Aimless Love – New and Selected Poems contains poems taken from four collections and about fifty new ones. All the poems I quoted here, can be found in Aimless Love.
I like the narrative quality of his poetry and that he takes something very mundane for his beginnings and then often moves to a bigger thought. The poem A Boy Shooting at a Statue is an excellent example for this.
Boy Shootig at a Statue
It was late afternoon,
the beginning of winter, a light snow,
and I was the only one in the small park
to witness the lone boy running
in circles around the base of a bronze statue.
I could not read the carved name
of the statesman who loomed above,
one hand on his cold hip,
but as the boy ran, head down
he would point a finger at the statue
and pull an imaginary trigger
imitating the sounds of rapid gunfire.
Evening thickened, the mercury sank,
but the boy kept running in the circle
of his footprints in the snow
shooting blindly into the air.
History will never find a way to end,
I thought, as I left the park by the north gate
and walked slowly home
returning to the station of my desk
where the sheets of paper I wrote on
were like pieces of glass
through which I could see
hundreds of dark birds circling in the sky below.
Maybe, unlike me, you already knew Billy Collins. If not, I hope I made you discover a new poet that you will like as much as I did. And maybe you’re even tempted to take his Masterclass.
I didn’t know Collins’ work before, but thank you for sharing it Croline – I shall check him out! 😀
I’m glad I’m not the only one. I suppose he’s much better known in the US. I hope you’ll enjoy his poetry.
Beautiful post, Caroline! I have read Billy Collins’ poems only in anthologies. Need to read one of his collections. The one you have looks wonderful. Maybe I’ll start with that. ‘The Lanyard’ is one of my alltime favourite poems. It makes me cry everytime I finish reading it. Loved all the poems you shared. The others were all new to me. So glad to know that you did Billy Collins’ workshop on reading and writing poetry. Must have been an amazing experience! Thanks for sharing your thoughts 🙂
Thank you, Vishy and now Im going to tell you something crazy. When I read The Lanyard again today I thought of you and what you wrote about your mother. To know that you knew it and like it so much, now that is really uncanny. He’s a lovely person and his teaching is wonderful. I don’t really write poetry but what he says is inspiring. I like my collection very much. It has so many poems in it. I hope you’ll like it.
Thank you for thinking of my mom and what I wrote about her, Caroline. The Lanyard makes me remember her everytime I read it. I’ll look forward to reading this collection of Billy Collins poems.
It did stay with me as sadly I wasn’t so fortunate with my mother. It’s lovely when someone has a relationship like you. It’s so precious.
These days, everyday, in the evening, I log on to WordPress, and the first thing I do is see whether your latest post is up 🙂 Thanks so much for doing a-post-a-day-in-May series. I’m loving it!
Aww. That’s so so nice if you. Thank you very much. I’m enjoying it but, of course, hope others do too, so it means a lot.
I had come across BC before, but hadn’t read much of him. Your extracts show his qualities well.
I’m glad to hear that. He’s one of those whose poems you can read several times and always discover something new.
I hadn’t heard of Billy Collins but I really like what you’ve shared here so I’ll explore him further – thanks Caroline!
My pleasure. I find his poetry quite different from a lot of what I usually read but engaging.
Billy Collins is a favorite of mine and I love hearing him read his work – deadpan leavened with humor.
It’s nice to know ou like him too. I like his voice. In the course he reads several of his poems.