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Reading Group Guide
At My Ease Poems by David Ignatow
These
poems reflect city life weaving in and out of taxis, subways,
and crowds, meditate on chance meetings, and observations of strangers'
work. Mr. Ignatow lived most of his life in New York City, and
because he was inextricably a New Yorker, he felt that in many
of his poems the style of his writing demanded "receptivity
to anger, sarcasm, satire, brutality, indifference and anguish,
anguish with which all is presented. Love and intimacy were without
hope. In brief, it [Ignatow's writing style] was the life of the
New Yorker of my temperament and circumstance."
Visit
the At My Ease web page [here]
Discussion Topics
- How does Ignatow fulfull his role as poet
in the crowded, ever-moving city of New York? What is his relationship
with the subjects of
his poems?
- What about the city does the poem "Suburbia" suggest
the poet takes comfort in? What does it suggest he dislikes about
the city? Where else in the collection do we see this love/hate
relationship with the city?
- In the poem, "After Writing a Poem," we
see what kind of environment the poet needs to write, and how
the act
of writing affects the poet's emotional and spiritual self. How
is
this environment and this self different from those found in
the daily life of a city dweller? How does the pot reconcile
these
contrasting identities?
- In "For WCW" Ignatow writes that William Carlos Williams "still
is with us,/bleating his lines." What do Ignatow's other
poems suggest about the immortality of poetry? His poetry?
- Is the proposition in the last poem of the
collection possible? Do we trust the poet's sincerity here?
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