A close second, that, but if trees have to follow a mandate, it
should be figs. Or maybe mangoes. Or persimmons. This is so confusing!
At 04:24 PM 3/23/2010, you wrote:
>PomegrAniTes! so messy, so good, so many seeds...
>
>On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 1:17 PM, Patrick McManus <
>[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> > Or plums??
> > P
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Poetryetc: poetry and poetics [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On
> > Behalf Of Angel Robert Marquez
> > Sent: 23 March 2010 20:02
> > To: [log in to unmask]
> > Subject: Re: 25 questions, #4...
> >
> > should a tree yield apples or apricots?
> >
> > On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 11:26 AM, Gerald Schwartz
> > <[log in to unmask]>wrote:
> >
> > > Question # 4:
> > >
> > > Should a poet, if confronted with a choice, write a piece for other poets
> > > who
> > > read poetry or write for an audience of everyone who will read it?
> > >
> > No virus found in this incoming message.
> > Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
> > Version: 8.5.437 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/2764 - Release Date: 03/22/10
> > 19:44:00
> >
Announcing The Whole Island: Six Decades of Cuban Poetry (University
of California Press).
http://go.ucpress.edu/WholeIsland
"Not since the 1982 publication of Paul Auster's Random House Book of
Twentieth Century French Poetry has a bilingual anthology so
effectively broadened the sense of poetic terrain outside the United
States and also created a superb collection of foreign poems in
English. There is nothing else like it." John Palattella in The
Nation
|