Cultivating the Craft: C.B. Anderson and the Garden of Formalism

Classical Poets Live: An Interview with C.B. Anderson, Readings of Paterson and WilburClassical Poets Live: An Interview with C.B. Anderson, Readings of Paterson and Wilbur

Poetry is often treated as a wild thing, a spark that strikes without warning. But for C.B. Anderson, the featured guest on Classical Poets Live, the art form is less about lightning and more about the slow, deliberate work of the soil. Billed as the “Poetical Gardener,” Anderson brings a distinct practical philosophy to the often abstract world of verse.

Hosted by Andrew Benson Brown, this session (Episode 7, Part 2) does not just skim the surface of biography. It digs into the mechanics of construction. Anderson, a professional gardener by trade, treats the constraints of meter and rhyme not as cages, but as the necessary trellises that allow the vine to climb higher than it could on its own.

The Lattice of Discipline

The conversation creates a natural bridge between the pruning shears and the red pen. A garden that is allowed to grow unchecked becomes a tangle of weeds; a poem without form often collapses under its own weight. Anderson’s approach suggests that the beauty of a formal poem—a sonnet, a villanelle—relies on the tension between the wild impulse of emotion and the rigid structure that contains it.

This is not a dry academic lecture. The discussion feels tangible, smelling faintly of turned earth. The metaphor of the seed is central here: a poem begins as a small, hard kernel of an idea. It requires patience, watering, and occasionally, the ruthless removal of weak stems to ensure the final bloom is vibrant.

Echoes of Wilbur and Paterson

The event extends beyond Anderson’s own work to examine the giants who shaped the landscape. The readings include selections from Richard Wilbur and Don Paterson, two masters who demonstrate the range of formal poetry.

Richard Wilbur is the obvious ancestor in this lineage—the mid-century American master whose elegance often made the most difficult technical feats look effortless. Reading Wilbur is like walking through a manicured estate where every view is calculated for maximum effect.

Don Paterson, the Scottish contemporary, offers a different texture. His work, particularly his sonnets, often carries a grittier, more aphoristic edge. Bringing Paterson into the dialogue shows that formalism is not a museum piece; it is a living, breathing mode of expression that can handle the rougher edges of modern life just as well as the sublime.

A Vagabond’s Salon

Andrew Benson Brown, describing himself as a “vagabond” poet and historian, steers the ship with a casual but informed curiosity. The dynamic between host and guest avoids the stiffness of a formal interview. It feels like a pause between labors, a moment taken to wipe the brow and admire the work done.

For those who write, the session serves as a reminder that inspiration is only the beginning. The real work happens in the weeding, the pruning, and the daily tending of the lines. The “Poetical Gardener” does not just wait for the rain; he prepares the ground.