HÉDI KADDOUR
If I say:
A swallow skims,
I am asked:
Skims what?
The street,
the rooftop,
the meadow?
I need more information.
For example:
A swallow skims the rooftop.
It was enough to add the complement.
Thus sometimes
the verb needs a complement.
—michael palmer
Hédi Kaddour 1945–
tunis, tunisia
K
addour is a critic and a contributor to such journals as the American
Poetry Review. His poems have appeared in the New Yorker, the Paris
Review, Poetry, Poetry International, Prairie Schooner, and Verse. He
has been director of the Atelier d’écriture at the Centre d’études poétiques and
currently teaches literature, drama, and creative writing in Lyon, in addition to
writing a theater column. Principal works: La Fin des vendanges, 1989; La Chaise
vide, 1993; Jamais une ombre simple, 1994; L’Émotion impossible, 1994; Les Fileuses,
1995; Passage au Luxembourg: Poèmes, 2000.