twelveoone
ground zero
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2004
- Posts
- 5,882
what you are good at...
Harold Bloom has an interesting series out, humbly titled "Bloom's Major Poets" or something like that. I recommend it highly, despite the fact that all seem to write in the English language. No Du Fu - Maya Angelou (?). Each is a collection of critisms. I just read Poe, I was surprised as to how many poets, critics consider him to be a bad poet (wouldst that I should be as bad). But it is balanced by others that point out some things he excels at and reasons why it works.
I got to thinking about the Do's and Don'ts of poetry and thought I should come up with something. Every Don't I did, about equal between sloppiness and deliberation (and alot of it worked). But this should not imply when someone like Pat Carrington, Senna Jawa, Tzara. et al. say something about poetry, you shouldn't pay attention. Because anything goes, right? Far from it, they have took the time and studied the effects of the tools of poetry. And what the warn about, you should be very wary of, because most of the time it won't work. Everything they say has that value and it is well worth considering.
Probably two questions you should ask yourself when confronted with a poem:
What is it?
What is it doing?
when you begin to come up with answers, you'll have your do's and don'ts, and getting back to Poe, if it does what you want it to do, and remember you have to know what you are doing - then you can damn well write as much "bad" poetry as you want.
Harold Bloom has an interesting series out, humbly titled "Bloom's Major Poets" or something like that. I recommend it highly, despite the fact that all seem to write in the English language. No Du Fu - Maya Angelou (?). Each is a collection of critisms. I just read Poe, I was surprised as to how many poets, critics consider him to be a bad poet (wouldst that I should be as bad). But it is balanced by others that point out some things he excels at and reasons why it works.
I got to thinking about the Do's and Don'ts of poetry and thought I should come up with something. Every Don't I did, about equal between sloppiness and deliberation (and alot of it worked). But this should not imply when someone like Pat Carrington, Senna Jawa, Tzara. et al. say something about poetry, you shouldn't pay attention. Because anything goes, right? Far from it, they have took the time and studied the effects of the tools of poetry. And what the warn about, you should be very wary of, because most of the time it won't work. Everything they say has that value and it is well worth considering.
Probably two questions you should ask yourself when confronted with a poem:
What is it?
What is it doing?
when you begin to come up with answers, you'll have your do's and don'ts, and getting back to Poe, if it does what you want it to do, and remember you have to know what you are doing - then you can damn well write as much "bad" poetry as you want.