【1080p | Adult Movies Online】
Alice Notley’s Prophecies
On Poetry

ALICE NOTLEY AT HOME WITH HER SON ANSELM, NEW YORK, 1984. PHOTOGRAPH BY SUSAN CATALDO, COURTESY OF ALICE NOTLEY.
In the new Spring issue ofThe Paris Review, we published an Art of Poetry interview with Alice Notley, conducted by Hannah Zeavin. To mark the occasion, we commissioned a series of short essays that analyze Notley’s works. We hope readers will enjoy discovering, or rediscovering, these lectures, essays, and poems.
I was not raised with any religion. We weren’t told that God was dead; having never existed, he’d had no opportunity to die. Instead, the material world had its own beauty, if occasionally cold or mathematical: the paradox of particle and wave, the litanies of astounding facts and figures (do you know how a snake sheds its skin?). It was a view of life ruled by information: sensible, finite, hard.
And so, when poets find the confidence to prophesy, I often doubt. If someone tells me in so many words that they are about to deliver me another Book of Luminous Things, as Miłosz memorably titled one anthology, my brow furrows, even if I remain curious. When I was in college, I was in a workshop with a poet who was writing their dissertation on “vatic” poetry of the twentieth century. After looking up the word, I always found it slightly amusing. How easily the mystic could be isolated, another device in the poet’s bag of tricks. Poets are used to the idea of other voices speaking through them (don’t get them started on the etymology of inspire), but an overreliance on a private line to a higher power can begin to feel cheap. There’s a reason Berryman called Rilke a jerk (though of course, pot, kettle).
But when I first read Alice Notley’s sprawling, twisting, hilarious, and deadly serious poem “The Prophet,” I regained a certain measure of belief. The poem, written in the late seventies, stretches across a dozen pages in long lines alternating with short, a little like Whitman’s exultations spilling over the margin. Who’s speaking? Hard to say—you feel the voice, but lines ricochet in different directions. Take the first two: “They say there is a dying star which is traveling in two directions. / Don’t brood over how you may have behaved last night.” Nearly opposite ideas—one cosmic, one personal—but somehow fusing. Then language rains down like brimstone. It seems to never stop, never waiting for you to “place” it—it’s the difference between a prophet in a white beard and white robes and another speaker who is at once more ordinary, more elusive, and more terrifying. Commands (“You must often luminously tell / The grossest joke you know to all those stiffs in the other room”), suggestions (“Perhaps you should / Call money ‘green zinnias’ ”), declarations (“Science has almost made it that you yourself hardly ever perceive / anything”), questions (“Why must your / Husband occasionally seem to think other women are more wonderful / than you?”), and observations (“When you / do the mistaking, / The taco-&-vodka man laughs wickedly”) intertwine and contradict, throwing up scenes and ideas and dismantling them just as fast. The poem is studded with New York scenes and TV-show flickers, but it’s also a mind voyaging through and beyond the quotidian, held together with confidence from a place you can’t observe.
And isn’t the prophetic something truly surprising, arriving from outside our impaired vision? Could we all have the ability to surprise if we were willing to loosen certain ideas about poetry that we think we require? Notley writes, “Don’t be afraid of your own mind, there’s an ocean there you know / how to swim in.” Surrendering to that potentially infinite flow brings inner and outer together, makes our ordinary coeval with that dying star. Luminous without the eye roll. “The Prophet” helps you to exist for a while in a place between meaning and not meaning—somewhere easy to get to, but maybe not so easy to stay in. It’s tempting to compare it to the oracle at Delphi, writhing through the fumes—I suppose she had a good time, too, and maybe a sense of humor in delivering all those reversible curses. As Notley’s poem says, either breaking down or going too fast for any consciousness (hard to tell): “You have remarkable power / Which you not using like sonofabitch.”
David Schurman Wallace is a writer living in New York.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
The Sound and the “Furious”
2025-06-26 06:40Wrong number scams are on the rise again, thanks to AI
2025-06-26 05:57Madrid Open 2025 livestream: Watch live tennis for free
2025-06-26 05:36This fat bear's before and after photos are stunning
2025-06-26 04:59Popular Posts
Specs and possible pricing leak for Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge
2025-06-26 05:45Wordle today: The answer and hints for May 4, 2025
2025-06-26 04:30The State of PC Gaming in 2016
2025-06-26 04:05Featured Posts
Best headphones deal: Save up to 51% on Beats at Amazon
2025-06-26 06:31Today's Hurdle hints and answers for May 2, 2025
2025-06-26 04:06Google is putting Gemini AI in the hands of kids under 13
2025-06-26 04:06AMD Radeon RX 550 + Intel Pentium G4560
2025-06-26 04:06Popular Articles
NYT mini crossword answers for May 12, 2025
2025-06-26 05:28Mother's Day gifts from Ban.do: Vases, mugs, & more
2025-06-26 04:42Exceptionally rare radio sources detected in the distant universe
2025-06-26 04:05Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (5147)
Inheritance Information Network
Keeping Hope Alive
2025-06-26 06:39Future Information Network
How the expiring de minimis rule will affect online shopping
2025-06-26 06:38New Knowledge Information Network
Apple isn't overly worried about Trump's tariffs. Here's why.
2025-06-26 06:11Happiness Information Network
Wordle today: The answer and hints for May 5, 2025
2025-06-26 05:11Impression Information Network
Best Max streaming deal: Save 20% on annual subscriptions
2025-06-26 04:05