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I
never thought I'd find myself writing about poetry, because I don't
write a lot of it, myself, but a few remarks at a recent poetry
workshop prompted me to ask what exactly it is, and what attractions
can it possibly have for the ordinary reader, who just wants an easy read.
The Collins English Dictionary
defines poetry as - literature in metrical form; verse, but
many modern-day poets ignore this and simply chop prose up into
pieces and place those pieces on separate lines. I've seen such
methods used even by established poets. Others overuse imagery and
metaphors to such an extent that the reader is no longer quite sure
what they are talking about and eventually no longer cares, but puts
the book down and goes off to find something more understandable.
The presenter of the workshop
that I mentioned, also made the comment that "poetry has never
been properly defined". That presents major difficulties for
anyone who is trying to write the thing. The problem with practicing
something that has never been properly defined is that you have to
make up your own rules as you go along. Indeed, some modern poets
seem to do this with a total disregard for their potential readers.
The feeling you get is that they don't care if you read their work at
all. They are so far above you, that you don't matter, or come into
consideration in their poetical scheme of things. Is it any wonder
that poetry sells so badly when something that should be a delight
becomes a drudge to read and finally something to avoid?
Now, excuse me if I'm one of the
plebs - "I yam what I yam" (as Popeye used to say) -
there's no getting away from it. And being of the common sort, I like
best to read common poets, and there are plenty of them around, if
you do a little searching. Please understand, of course, that common
poetry doesn't mean bad poetry, it simply means poetry you can tune
in to, poetry which you can read and say, oh yes, oh yes, oh YES!
Like all writing, the more
assessable a poem is, the more valuable it becomes. Something that is
indecipherable except to the person who wrote it well, what
use is it to humanity at large? ... a gem of purest ray serene
that is hidden in a dark unfathomed cave is absolutely no good
to anyone.
Let me just tell you of an
amazing excuse I have heard for not writing in rhyme: "Well,
sometimes, the right word is hard to find ..." So. So, they
admit that they are just not up to it, that they don't want to take
the trouble? Have these people never heard of a dictionary,
nor of a thesaurus? There are even rhyming dictionaries, if you're
really stuck. But, of course, this is all common stuff, this is for
the plebs.
Johnny wrote in blank verse,
He never wrote in rhyme.
He said, "I don't want to rehearse,
I haven't got the time."
And so he wrote his rhymless song
For hour on hour on hour,
While life went rhyming right along
Beneath his ivory tower. |