• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Aesthetic Realism: Life, Love & Learning

Leila Rosen, English Educator & Aesthetic Realism Associate

  • Home
    • About Me
  • Life & Love
    • What, in Ourselves, Hinders True Love?
    • Being Important: What Does It Mean & What Mistakes Do We Make about It?
    • What Are Women Looking For in Love?
    • What’s Real Intelligence—about Ourselves & the World?
    • What, in a Woman Herself, Interferes with Love?
    • A Woman’s Determination: Right or Wrong?
    • Caring for People—Wisdom or Foolishness?
    • The Fight in Women between Security & Adventure—Is There a Beautiful Solution?
    • Justice versus Injustice in Men & Women
    • We Want to Be Happy—But Do We Also Want Not to Be?
    • What Does Getting Ahead Really Mean?
    • What Is a Husband’s Biggest Mistake?
    • Can Men & Women Be Intelligent in Love?
    • A Man’s Imagination: What Makes It a Friend or Foe?
    • What Is Woman’s Greatest Victory—Appearing Beautiful or Seeing Beautifully?
    • Public Self & Private Thoughts—Does A Man Have To Pretend?
    • Wowing People and Liking Oneself—What Is the Difference?
    • Does Our Anger Weaken or Strengthen Us?
    • What, in Ourselves, Hinders True Love?
    • Individuality and Love: Do They Have to Fight?
    • The Beauty of Baseball Shows Us How We Want to Be!
  • Successful Teaching: Here’s How
    • Through Aesthetic Realism Interest Wins, Cynicism Loses
    • On Gogol’s “The Nose,” a Satire on Snobbishness
    • Lessons on Rhyme, Using the Aesthetic Realism Teaching Method
    • Students Choose Knowing the World, Not Fighting with It
    • More on the Aesthetic Realism Teaching Method
  • Language, Literature & Poetry
    • Man Is Poetically Shown in Southern Road, 1932
    • How Musical Can Sadness Be?—or, Grief, Anger, Hope
    • The World Is in Idioms
    • Art Is Within Science
    • Poetry, Atmosphere, and Neatness
    • Some Poetry Is Distinguished
    • The Old Wives’ Tale, by Arnold Bennett
    • A Thrilling Talk on Literature, by Sheldon Kranz
    • Favorite Links about Literature & Teaching English
    • Literature & Life: A Blog
  • Noted Men & Women
    • Queen Isabella of Castille
    • Elizabeth Palmer Peabody
  • Blog
  • Links–& More
    • Photos & Travel
      • Dominican Republic
      • Mississippi
      • Italy, 2012
      • Puerto Rico, 2016
      • Maine
      • Water and land, East Coast
      • Near home
      • Alaska
      • Utah
      • Photographs from some of my travels
      • Cities
    • To find out more about Aesthetic Realism

Eli Siegel’s majestic poem “Hot Afternoons Have Been in Montana” on film

April 15, 2020 by leirose

Aesthetic Realism itself began with Eli Siegel’s seeing of the relations among all the things reality has. It showed through his early writing in poetry and prose. He later wrote: “It was these thoughts that, becoming passionate and musical, took the form of “Hot  ‘Hot Afternoons Have Been in Montana.'” This grandly sweeping poem of relation—relation in time and space, the relation among the outward doings of life and the inner thoughts of people, the relation of the inanimate world and living beings—won the Nation magazine’s poetry prize in 1925.

The poem begins:

Quiet and green was the grass of the field,
The sky was whole in brightness,
And O, a bird was flying, high, there in the sky,
So gently, so carelessly and fairly.

Award-winning filmmaker and Aesthetic Realism consultant Ken Kimmelman made a film of this majestic poem. Historian Howard Zinn wrote: “Ken Kimmelman’s reproduction, on film, of Eli Siegel’s magisterial poem, is an extraordinary achievement. It matches, in its visual beauty, the elegance of Siegel’s words, and adds the dimension of stunning imagery to an already profound work of art.”

You’ll be stirred to your depths by this great combination of words and visual images. Now, more than ever, we need to feel that beauty is just as real as the things that can frighten us. I’m grateful to be learning that from Aesthetic Realism. I hope this film encourages everyone else to feel it too.

Hot Afternoons Have Been in Montana

Hot Afternoons Have Been in Montana: film

Filed Under: About Literature

Primary Sidebar

Kindness: definition & comment by Eli Siegel

People everywhere are looking for kindness from others, and we want to be kind too. But we can be mixed-up about what kindness really is. In his great work Definitions and Comment: Being a Description of the World, Eli Siegel shows what kindness is, in beautiful prose that makes this big human subject clear! You can read his definition and comment here.

© 2014–2025 by Leila Rosen