Wendell Berry on How to Be a Poet and a Complete Human Being
That's what the wise and wonderfulWendell Berry (b. August 5, 1934) – a man of great wisdom on solitude, love, and our "rugged individualism"– explores in a marvelous poem titled "How to Be a Poet (to remind myself)," found in his New Collected Poems (public library).
In this recording from the consistently transcendent On Being, Berry brings his beautifully aged voice to the poem – which is in many ways not only about how to be a poet, but also about how to be an artist of any kind. With its insistence on the vitalizing power of silence andstillness and self-refinement, it is perhaps, above all, about how to be a complete human being.
HOW TO BE A POET
(to remind myself)Make a place to sit down.Sit down. Be quiet.You must depend uponaffection, reading, knowledge,skill – more of eachthan you have – inspiration,work, growing older, patience,for patience joins timeto eternity. Any readerswho like your poems,doubt their judgment.Breathe with unconditional breaththe unconditioned air.Shun electric wire.Communicate slowly. Livea three-dimensioned life;stay away from screens.Stay away from anythingthat obscures the place it is in.There are no unsacred places;there are only sacred placesand desecrated places.Accept what comes from silence.Make the best you can of it.Of the little words that comeout of the silence, like prayersprayed back to the one who prays,make a poem that does not disturbthe silence from which it came.
For more of Berry's enduring wisdom, see his meditations on the two great enemies of creative work and what poetic form reveals about the secret of marriage, then treat yourself to Derek Walcott's stirring ode to being at home in ourselves and subscribe to On Being here.
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