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ow that he has found
his answer and is through with the debate (for the moment,
at least) the language has become far more concrete and the
images stronger. He is done with pondering the abstract and
is affirming, in true romantic fashion, the sanctity of the
ordinary and the everyday. It is a breathtaking conclusion,
and comes about because Norris is wise enough to know that
the only way to succeed at art is to embrace life
first.
n the same year Norris
also published Alphabet of
Desire. The book consists of
two parts: "The Ascent of Spring" and "Alphabet of Desire".
The former could be subtitled "and the descent of winter".
It is a mixture of poems and prose pieces. The prose pieces
comments on the poems or on the poetic process in general.
They read like fragments of a statement on poetics. Winter
and spring are treated metaphorically in the poetry and the
prose. The longing for winter to end and the desire for
spring's arrival runs parallel with the urge to write a book
and the struggle against impediments to that end. Just as
spring is a re-creation of life that winter has killed
writing is a re-creation of the writer into another form.
His rebirth as a poet grows out of the rebirth springs
brings to the world: "What I was doing waiting for spring to
arrive, my life to revive, my poetic powers to reemerge and
tell me who I should be" (23). But winter, with its
absences, its cill of death, also breeds the poet for "out
of emptiness/a poet is born, the eye catching/at the world"
(23). This prose/lyric sequence marks a leap forward in his
internal debate because it shows him moving beyond the
simple opposites of winter vs spring, death vs creativity
into a synthetic view that acknowledges that the poet
requires the disparate elements, the light and the dark, the
positive and the negative, if he is to have a whole vision
of life.
 
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