Oh
youthful rage,
unmet
desire, now,
but
do not sully,
speaks
an age,
so
as to caution.
Of
minds oppressed,
time
lends a loss,
a
scar to ways in error.
One
speaks of progeny,
to
witness
where
parents failed to see –
in
this, time tempers me,
a
reason for the living.
Below
these stones they lie,
and
are but visits
when
memory comes
to
remind that mistress roams,
a
lover seeking, true.
This
grief is wound to heart
and
mind oppressed,
a
salve to heal, by knowing –
a
mirth, to counter,
a
gift, a guide to mind,
like
stern through water
for
a calmer grace,
a
dream for council,
after
storm.
Interview
TSTmpj:
Are you English? Please feel free not to say if you deem it too
intrusive a question. I ask it because your poetry reminds me of some of
what I perceive to be the finest English poetry of recent decades. Who
are some of your favourite contemporary poets, and what in particular appeals
to you about them?
j.p.
christiansen: No, I'm Danish, residing
in the US. Favorite contemporary poets/poetesses? I have none, trying to forge
a new direction for my poetry. I've read some classical poets as well as
contemporary ones, both from the English-speaking world, as well as
translations from around the globe. Classical Persian poets speak to me,
especially, but I just read, and let 'osmosis' take the course whereby my poet
absorbs to later write his own.
*
*
TSTmpj:
Your technique is superb. In your formative times, who did you
learn from?
j.p.
christiansen: Technique? I'm very
ignorant of established poetic form and technique. I think, again, that I just
absorb rhythm, flow, and format from what I read, and subconsciously apply what
appeals to me.
*
TSTmpj:
Which is your favourite Shakespearean play, and why?
j.p.
christiansen: Being Danish, Hamlet, of
course. Its message of personal struggle, encapsulated by "to be, or not
to be", as it applies to theory and deed, is one each human being must
come to terms with throughout life. Shakespeare's strength lies in the fact that
his knowledge of human nature still applies to we who live today.
Bio Note
Much
of j.p. christiansen’s poetry is inspired by music, in this case Shakespearean
lyrics set to song by classical English composers.
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