Cento poems make
great bedside reading, because cento is Latin for quilt. A cento is a sort of found
poem literally "stitched together": every line is taken from another
poem. It's a very old form, dating back to at least the 4th century, but it
seems custom-made for our hyper-linked age. And it's a great form for D-I-Y
types and renters (and those suffering from chronic
writer's block), because the cento allows you to make something with what
you're given, rather than building a structure from scratch. Selection is
a form of invention. Make lemonade.
Here's a cento to celebrate our recent "stunning win"--click on each line to be taken to the source text.
Light Reading Always the light recedes; with groping hands light reaches through a leaf, falls branch to branch, leaf to leaf, down to the ground. Light sinks and rusts how all matter dissolves, eventually, into energy: the moon will soon shine further than sunshine could. How long ago the day is. Sometimes a light surprises, a special kind of dark called light, the darkness thinking the light, ordinary light. When the light appears, boy, when the light appears-- how pleasant the yellow butter. Light the first light of evening, as in a room in the flickering candlelight, a window, from which you can see clouds better than people, black pine tree in an orange light. We point at the moon with one finger, and hold it up to the light of night and light and the half-light of other days around me.
Send your Shelter Odes--including Bedroom Centos--to PoetLaureate@ApartmentTherapy.com by Feb. 28. Winner gets a book or a month of guest posts. (SGH)










wow. my mind spins with the implications of your hyperlinked cento. it seems the perfect blog creation.
separate but related -- would direct your attention to the advertising experiment ongoing at the New York Post online. This from yesterday's Times...
"Business news articles appearing yesterday on www.nypost.com included words that were underlined and in green; when a visitor rolled a mouse over those words, a small box labeled "sponsored link" appeared with an advertising message and a link to more information."
I like to think that the NY Post is a kind of misguided capitalist Cento.
Are you suggesting that poetry turn toward product placement as a way of increasing ROI? Because I think that's a grand idea.
Exactly. Imagine what the right museum would pay for worldwide rights to, say, the "Michaelangelo" link in Prufrock.