Aesthetic Realism Foundation

  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Directions
  • To Contribute
  • flat_facebook

Blog

“What Poetry Really Is—& Your Own Hopes”—The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known #2101

January 18, 2023

Steve Weiner, computer specialist and Aesthetic Realism associate, writes:

The new issue of TRO—about the beautiful and utterly practical way Aesthetic Realism sees poetry—is enormously kind. What is poetry, the real thing? Does every good poem have within it, in its technique, a way of seeing reality—events, people, objects—that we need and want, even want desperately? Yes!  You’ll have a wonderful time reading “What Poetry Really Is—& Your Own Hopes,” the current issue of The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known!

The commentary by Ellen Reiss begins:

Dear Unknown Friends:

With this issue we begin to serialize A Statement about Poetry: Some Instances, a lecture Eli Siegel gave in August 1970. It is, like Aesthetic Realism itself, great as scholarship, new in its understanding of what art and beauty are. And it is, vitally and kindly, about the life and confusion of everyone. I may as well say at once: this lecture is about what I love most in the world, the Aesthetic Realism explanation of poetry.

Eli Siegel is the critic who showed, after all the centuries of literary criticism, what poetry truly is, and why what it is matters—matters to all of us. “All beauty,” he explained, “is a making one of opposites, and the making one of opposites is what we are going after in ourselves.” This certainly includes the beauty, in words, which is poetry. He is the critic who showed that the difference between a true poem and something that’s not, has fundamentally to do with whether we will like ourselves or dislike ourselves.

As a Prelude

As a prelude to this 1970 lecture, I’ll quote from Mr. Siegel’s 1964 essay “The Immediate Need for Poetry” the following definitive, warm passages:

According to Aesthetic Realism, poetry is a picture of reality at its truest, most useful….
When we are born we hope to make some sense of the forces in us. We want to move, and we want to be quiet; we want to assail and we want to be secluded; we want to be delighted, and we want to be self-satisfied; we want excitement and we want repose. All through life, really, we are trying to make jarring, separating propensities to act as one; we are trying to have forces coalesce in an other than languid oneness. —And it is poetry that makes jarring, separating propensities to act as one; it is poetry that coalesces forces in a oneness that is not languid….Read more

Most Viewed Posts

  • The Philosophy of Depression

  • The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known

  • “Alexander Calder: Art Answers the Questions of Our Lives”

  • Black & White: A Poem with Photographs

  • “Is Beauty the Making One of Opposites?”

  • “Books”—an Essay for Children

  • “A Good Husband: What Does That Mean?”

  • “Man and Nature in New York and Kansas”

  • “Hawthorne’s ‘The Man of Adamant’”

  • “The Beauty of Art & the Pain about Love”

  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Mission Statement
    • What Is Aesthetic Realism?
    • Eli Siegel, Founder
    • Faculty
    • Some Background
  • Calendar
  • How to Study
    Aesthetic Realism
    • Classes
      • The Aesthetic Realism Explanation of Poetry
      • Anthropology Is about You & Everyone
      • “If It Moves, It Can Move You”: Opposites in the Cinema
      • The Visual Arts & the Opposites
      • The Aesthetic Realism Teaching Method
      • The Opposites in Music
      • Understanding Marriage!
    • Consultations
      • What Happens in an Aesthetic Realism Consultation?
      • Aesthetic Realism Consultation of Nancy Huntting
      • Coldness, Warmth, & Mistakes by Jaime Torres, DPM
      • What Kind of Effect on Men? by Lauren Phillips
      • My Aesthetic Realism Consultations by Richita Anderson
      • The Fight about Excitement by Dan McClung
      • The Trouble with Competition by Miriam Weiss
    • Workshops for Educators
    • Outreach
      • Art Talks
      • Architecture
      • Bullying
      • Film Presentations
      • Seniors
      • Theatre Company
      • Young People
  • Events
    • Public Seminars
    • Theatrical & Musical Matinees
    • Saturday Night Presentations
    • Directions
  • Periodical
  • Library
    • Online Library
    • Films & Videos
    • Blog
    • Lectures
      • Aesthetic Realism and Love, Introduction
      • Aesthetic Realism and Love, Part 1
      • Aesthetic Realism and Love, Part 2
      • Aesthetic Realism and Expression, Introduction by Ellen Reiss
      • Aesthetic Realism and Expression, Part 1
      • Aesthetic Realism and Expression, Part 2
      • Aesthetic Realism and Hope
      • Aesthetic Realism and Hope, Part 2
      • The Drama of Mind, Introduction
      • The Drama of Mind, Part 1
      • The Drama of Mind, Part 2
      • Aesthetic Realism and Learning, Introduction
      • Aesthetic Realism and Learning, Part 1
      • Aesthetic Realism and Learning, Part 2
      • Aesthetic Realism and Learning, Part 3
      • Map to Happiness, by Eli Siegel
      • Greenwich Village Is in the World
      • Mind and Intelligence, Introduction by Ellen Reiss
      • Mind and Intelligence, by Eli Siegel, Part 1
      • Mind and Intelligence, by Eli Siegel, Part 2
      • Mind and Intelligence, by Eli Siegel, Part 3
      • Mind and Schools
      • Mind and Schools by Eli Siegel, Part 1
      • Mind and Schools by Eli Siegel, Part 2
      • Mind and Schools by Eli Siegel, Part 3
      • Aesthetic Realism and People
      • Aesthetic Realism and Education
      • So, What Is Bitterness?
    • News Archive
    • Related Resources
  • Book Store
  • Visual & Dramatic Arts
    • Terrain Gallery
    • Koppelman Foundation
    • Aesthetic Realism Theatre Company
  • En Español

To Contribute | Contact | En Español

Aesthetic Realism Foundation    141 Greene Street   New York, NY 10012   212.777.4490

Privacy Policy | Blog Comment Policy   Copyright © 1997–2025   Aesthetic Realism Foundation

To Contribute | Contact | En Español

Aesthetic Realism Foundation
141 Greene Street
New York, NY 10012
212.777.4490

Privacy Policy

Blog Comment Policy

Copyright © 1997–2025
Aesthetic Realism Foundation

MENU
  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Mission Statement
    • What Is Aesthetic Realism?
    • Eli Siegel, Founder
    • Faculty
    • Some Background
  • Calendar
  • How to Study
    Aesthetic Realism
    • Classes
    • Consultations
    • Workshops for Educators
    • Outreach
  • Events
    • Public Seminars
    • Theatrical & Musical Matinees
    • Saturday Night Presentations
    • Directions
  • Periodical
  • Library
    • Online Library
    • Films & Videos
    • Blog
    • Lectures
    • News Archive
    • Related Resources
  • Book Store
  • Visual & Dramatic Arts
    • Terrain Gallery
    • Koppelman Foundation
    • Aesthetic Realism Theatre Company
  • En Español
    • Subscribe
    • Contact
    • Directions
    • To Contribute
    • flat_facebook