Henry quotes the motto ars est celare artem, which I interpret as "Art consists of concealing overt signs of artifice."  That's all very well, but I don't associate this principle at all with Gould's own poetry, which seems to flaunt its artifice quite a bit:
"Loosen your reason?  Hard to, feller, avast
cheskermate centred your creel, the yaksee
sweltered in a fireheaded woolfox brutee!  
Around and aground like a termulating ski mast!"
An extreme example, maybe, but not at all atypical.  I could have chosen many examples from various sections of Stubborn Grew, the only book of his I own.  Many of HG's overt models--Joyce, Crane, Berryman--are also artifice-flaunting rather than artifice-concealing artisans.   I associate "ars est celare" more with Creeley:  poetry that doesn't seem difficult to write, that conceals its craft, so that someone might even say, "Why is that a poem?"  ("Is that a real poem or did you just make it up?")  Berryman famously pronounced Creeley "dull."  
"He wants to be 
a brutal old man,
an agressive old men,
as dull, as brutal  
as the emptiness around him." 
Not that there's anything wrong with overt artifice:  I love both kinds of poetry, in fact.  Stevens at his gaudiest, Williams at his sparest. It could be that Henry Gould understands the motto differently than I do.  That is more plausible that thinking that he misperceives his own work.
Other poets I associate with this ideal of concealing artfulness:  Bromige, O'Hara (in poems like "Hate is only one of many responses").
Poets I think belong to the opposite camp: James Merrill, Derek Walcott, Prynne, Góngora.  Poets of verbal excess, verbal play.  For me, Henry is in that camp, whether he realizes it or not!    
 
 
 
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