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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Local poet, teacher George Starbuck honoredWitty poet remembered for inventing forms, re-writing Shakespeare
By Paula Carter
College Library Communications George Starbuck (1931-1996) is a poet known for his wit, intelligence, and precision; he was the winner of the Yale Series of Younger Poets prize for his first book of poems and director of writing programs at the University of Iowa
Don Share, curator of the Woodberry Poetry Room, said, "George Starbuck was a renowned figure from the great era of the Boston/Cambridge poetry giants and I was lucky to study under him at Boston University. By the time I'd become a student of his, he was ... legendary. He managed to be both cutting edge and a
Starbuck addressed profound issues of his day with wit and cunning. A master of forms, he left behind a variety of new forms, including his Standard-Length-and-Breadth-Sonnets, known as SLABS, and he famously rewrote some of Shakespeare's sonnets by eliminating all but few words, and published them in a pamphlet whose full title was: "Space-saver sonnets : purged of accretions & newly published in the corrected hemimeter version, prepared under the general folgership of George Starbuck." Starbuck once said, "For me, the long way round, through formalisms, word games, outrageous conceits (the worst of what we mean by 'wit') is the only road to truth.... Put another way: I have a conscious slavery to the language. The only alternatives are unconscious slavery, or the sainthood of the wholly silent."
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