marcin
(Marcin)
#1
not a mere intellectual project, but a deep
need, a necessity of poetry and therefore
natural experimentation, the kind that
should always be inherent in any work of
art.
Marè first two volumes moved almost
guardedly, under the weight of a past that
claimed its rightful share; then, as Brevini
noted, he “comes out of his own poetic
prehistory.”
Sìllabe e stelle [Syllables and Stars] ─ it is
perhaps not by chance that the preface to the
book is by Mario Lunetta ─ already offers in
the meter a Marè who displays full mastery
of his expressive tools. The verses become
dense, syncopated, only rarely do they come
to rest on a hendecasyllable, and
immediately come undone in a sort of
running sprint that finds him ready to react
and to entrust to them even those nuances