Luckily I've brought "Solution Passage" back with me for the holidays.  It's interesting that these poems were written in a period of time (1978-1981) when I was an undergraduate and not aware of the existence of Clark Coolidge.  I remember knowing creative writing graduate students at the time who wrote hokey poems about baseball or vegetables.  I was told, by prominent feminist critic and poet whose name still appears in Poetry, that WCW was  bad influence.  Academic year 1979-80 I was in Spain.  I think subscribing the the American Poetry Review in those days was a mistake.  It was depressing and bewildering:  so many poets, writing in so few styles.  I hated the emphasis on what  the poets looked like.  
"I AM a poet."  Why did WCW have to insist so much, at a relatively late point of his career, that he was indeed a poet?  He didn't really start writing his best work until he was almost 40.  Recognition was slow to come.  
The poem in which he defined his variable foot "the descent beckons / as the ascent beckoned" (or is it the other way around?) is curiously abstract and Latinate in vocabulary.  There are no things.  His earlier poetry is more prosodically interesting.  
I think of myself as devoted to only a handful of writers.  Yet when I make up the complete list, over half a life-time, it adds up to quite a few.  About 100 I have read deeply and assiduously.  Another few hundred I have read deeply for a less prolonged period of time.  Many times more I am professionally responsible for or have read more casually.  I am not completely up to date in my reading of the younger American poets--and I probably never will be since more are always emerging.  I do like Lisa Jarnot and Susan Schultz.  I have books by Jordan Davis, Stroffolino, and a few others, along with Ed Foster's anthology.   
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