Sharon Olds on revision
Sharon Olds
There are some things that have to do with art that we can’t control. This creature of the poem may assemble itself into a being with its own centrifugal force. That’s what I’m thinking about when I’m trying to get out of art’s way. Not trying to look good, if a poem’s about me. Not trying to look bad. Not asking a poem to carry a lot of rocks in its pockets. But just being an ordinary observer and liver and feeler and letting the experience get through you onto the notebook with the pen, through the arm, out of the body, onto the page, without distortion. And there are so many ways I could distort. If I wrote in a sonnet form, I would be distorting. Or if I had some great new idea for line breaks and I used it in a poem, but it’s really not right for that poem, but I wanted it, that would be distorting. It’s kind of like ego in a way, egotism or narcissism. Where the self is too active.
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I think that I am slowly improving in my ability to not be too melodramatic, to help the images have the right tenor. My first book came out when I was 37, so when I was finally able to speak as a writer my wish to not be silent was, in my early work, extreme. It’s like someone, in baseball, who thinks that the ball is being thrown by a very strong arm from the outfield, and so she can’t just land on home, she has to try to run way past it, practically into the dugout. Reading some of my earlier work, I get that sense of the need for too big a head of steam to be built up. It seems extreme to me at times, some of the imagery. That’s part of why I’m not so sorry I’m a little behind in putting books together, because some of those rather crude images I can now maybe correct. It also might be that maybe I’ve used an image that is too mild, and I’ll correct in the other direction. I don’t want to imply that it’s always going the other way. But my tendency was to be a little over the mark. And so I just really love now the possibility of getting it right.