“No matter how far over the hill
we get, this workhorse press
and I are still on the same page,
throwbacks lying low, bound
by the cause of words.”
we get, this workhorse press
and I are still on the same page,
throwbacks lying low, bound
by the cause of words.”
Sternlieb is a printer in Richmond, Mass., who since 1986
has published handmade, limited-edition letterpress poetry broadsides and
chapbooks. It’s a slow, painstaking, labor-intensive art. So is writing. As printer
and poet, Sternlieb celebrates “what doesn’t / change, changing hands.” That strikes
me as a useful way to think of tradition, literary and otherwise. Some essence,
including dedication to craft, remains the same across generations. A serious
poet today shares kinship, however attenuated, with Sappho and Dante. Sternlieb tells us a book he prints is “a newborn / relic,
grandfathered in,” and we admire his dedication to a marginal, archaic art. On this
date, Jan. 1, in 1751, Samuel Johnson wrote in The Rambler #83:
"Learning confers so much superiority on those who
possess it, that they might probably have escaped all censure had they been
able to agree among themselves; but as envy and competition have divided the
republick of letters into factions, they have neglected the common interest;
each has called in foreign aid, and endeavoured to strengthen his own cause by
the frown of power, the hiss of ignorance, and the clamour of popularity. They
have all engaged in feuds, till by mutual hostilities they demolished those
out-works which veneration had raised for their security, and exposed
themselves to barbarians, by whom every region of science is equally laid
waste."
Happy New Year to readers of Anecdotal Evidence and all who
are “bound / by the cause of words.”
3 comments:
Happy New Year. I've enjoyed the posts about the Battle of Fredericksburg. I visited the site a couple of years ago.
P.K.
Thank you for your fine work throughout the past year in your service to the cause of words - well set.
Cheers on the New Year.
B.R>
Bound I am. Bound I will always be.
Happy New Year, Patrick.
RB
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