The Ruined Elegance

The Ruined Elegance

by Fiona Sze-Lorrain
The Ruined Elegance

The Ruined Elegance

by Fiona Sze-Lorrain

Hardcover

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Overview

A lyrical collection that explores the interplay between poetry and history

In her new collection, Fiona Sze-Lorrain offers a nuanced yet dynamic vision of humanity marked by perils, surprises, and the transcendence of a "ruined elegance." Through an intercultural journey that traces lives, encounters, exiles, and memories from France, America, and Asia, the poet explores a rich array of historical and literary allusions to European masters, Asian sources, and American influences. With candor and humor, each lyrical foray is sensitive to silence and experience: "I want to honor / the invisible. I'll use the fog to see white peaches." There are haunting narratives from a World War II concentration camp, the Stalinist Terror, and a persecuted Tibet during the Cultural Revolution. There are also poems that take as their point of departure writings, paintings, sketches, photographs, and music by Gu Cheng, Giorgio Caproni, Bonnard, Hiroshige, Gao Xingjian, Kertész, and Debussy, among others. Grounded in the sensual, these poems probe existential questionings through inspirations from nature and the impermanent earth. Described by the Los Angeles Review of Books as "a high lyricist who refuses to resort to mere lyricism in order to articulate her experience," Sze-Lorrain renews her faith in music and poetic language by addressing the opposing aesthetics of "ruins" and "elegance," and how the experience of both defies judgment.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780691167503
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 09/29/2015
Series: Princeton Series of Contemporary Poets , #110
Pages: 72
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.40(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Fiona Sze-Lorrain is a poet, literary translator, editor, and zheng harpist. The author of two previous books of poetry in English, My Funeral Gondola and Water the Moon, she also writes and translates in French and Chinese. She lives in Paris.

Table of Contents

I WRONG EPIC

Given Silence 3

Towering 4

I Wait for the Ruined Elegance 5

Back from the Aegean Sea 6

In the Thick of It 7

Ionian Supper 9

Partita, but Nothing to Do with Bach 10

Few Days before Christmas 13

II IN A GODLESS TIME

Beginning 17

Spring Massacre 18

Mausoleum 19

Backstage 20

Day Seven 21

Center of a Journey 22

Am I What the Lake Gave Me 23

Meditation 24

Dusty Citadel 25

III THE BOOK, A SIMPLER GRAVE

To Whom It May Concern 29

Granted Asylum 31

Against Prologue 32

To Survive When It Must 33

Midnight Almanac 34

Yield, Please 36

Anna Akhmatova, or the Thoughts She Didn’t Write 37

An Uprising Committed to Longhand 38

Geneviève de Gaulle-Anthonioz took more than fifty years before writing Ravensbrück down in La Traversée de la nuit 39

Chosen by the Narrator 40

Cantabile (ma stonato) 41

IV CAUGHT IN DEFIANCE

Transparent 45

Ink Painting from the Joseon Dynasty 46

What’s Left of a Sijo 47

Chiaroscuro, 2 a.m. 48

Bonnard’s Naked Wife Leaving the Bathtub 49

La Chambre d’écoute 51

Three Moves, Clockwise 52

Om dhrung svaha 54

My Hiroshige 55

Peintre 56

Jardins sous la pluie 57

Notes 59

Acknowledgments 61

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"In the beginning was silence: Fiona Sze-Lorrain's poems honor this, ‘trying to measure / a quiet too pure / and transparent for humans.' These are poems of delicate ferocity; they seem to emerge from a profound yet whiplashed attentiveness. Sze-Lorrain registers the subtlest vibrations of the most difficult as well as the tenderest things—twentieth-century atrocities make themselves felt in a gesture in a prison, a buried book, ‘a revolution in the draft' of a feather. Also: poems, paintings, the eddies of sociable chat, ‘the last / Manchurian sky,' the color of rain. Shards of elegy, lament, intermittent flashes of wit, a philosophical sensuality throughout: this is subtle, sophisticated, gorgeous, and unsettling work by a poet open to being ‘torn by the lyric' as well as history. Sze-Lorrain aims ‘to honor / the invisible,' ‘to get silence right': she does."—Maureen N. McLane, author of My Poets

"The luminous art of Sze-Lorrain reveals how imaginative vision requires the veil. Hers is a contemporary, polycultural poetry, a language of distance and silence, rich with suggestion. The disparate, brilliant images of her Ruined Elegance fend off narrative, ‘torn by the lyric,' whose instrument is more enduring than its players: its ‘strings stayed taut. None / broke. Her fingernails did.'"—Eleanor Wilner, author of Tourist in Hell

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