- Spectra (book)
"Spectra: A Book of Poetic Experiments" was a small volume of
poetry published in 1916 by American writersWitter Bynner , who wrote under thepseudonym "Emanuel Morgan", andArthur Davison Ficke , who wrote as "Anne Knish.""Spectra" was preceded by a brief
manifesto outlining the methods of "Spectrism" as a school:*"In the first place, it speaks, to the mind of that process of diffraction by which are disarticulated the several colored and other rays of which light is composed. . . ."
*"In its second sense, the term Spectric relates to the reflex vibrations of physical sight, and suggests the luminous appearance which is seen after the exposure of the eye to intense light, and, by analogy, the after-colors of the poets initial vision."
*"In its third sense, Spectric connotes the overtones, adumbrations, or spectres which for the poet haunt all objects of both the seen and unseen world. . . "With this vague program, the two poets adopted personas for their namesakes. The poems in the collection were not given titles, merely
opus number s. "Emanuel Morgan" was a rhyming Whitman, full ofbacchanalia n,bard ic blatherskite. From "Opus 6:":"If I were only dafter"::"I might be making hymns":"To the liquor of your laughter"::"And the lacquer of your limbs."
"Anne Knish" was the archetypal
poetess , full of oracular "ipse dixits", sensual, enigmatic, and vaguelyscandal ous. In 1916, most Americans were unfamiliar with Eastern European cooking and had never heard ofknish es; the pseudonym was intended to be exotic and slightly oriental. Here is Knish's Opus 118::"If bathing were a virtue, not a lust":"I would be dirtiest."
:"To some, housecleaning is a holy rite.":"For myself, houses would be empty":"But for the golden motes dancing in sunbeams."
:"Tax-assessors frequently overlook valuables.":"Today they noted my jade.":"But my memory of you escaped them."
"Spectra" was meant to be the starting-point of a
hoax of exposure, after the manner of theTaxil hoax or, more recently, theSokal Affair . Bynner and Ficke were old-school poets who had grown weary of the "isms" and free-form experiments such asImagism that had displaced more traditional varieties of poetic practice. They meant the "Spectra" poems to mock the pretensions of these several schools, and tried to make them bad. The plan seemed to work; a number of American writers, includingEdgar Lee Masters andWilliam Carlos Williams , were entirely taken in by the hoax.By now, several flaws in the plan are apparent. First, the poems are not all that bad, and some, like Morgan's above, contain some fairly good lines. Both Bynner and Ficke realized after they had written the "Spectra" poems that in attempting to produce deliberately outrageous poetry, they had let their mental guard down, and produced some of their most interesting work. Much of their later verse in a more serious vein was influenced by their own experiments in "Spectra".
From the perspective of the present, the world has endured much worse in the way of poetic experiments during the Age of Charlatans in the twentieth century. The "Spectra" poems are probably the most widely remembered work of either Bynner or Ficke.
External links
* [http://ecclesiastes911.net/spectra.html "Spectra"] complete text
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