Fri 8 Feb 2008
Pottery
Posted by jeromio under Wordz
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Prose is the normal form of writing – obviously. It’s what you see in newspapers, magazines, novels – every piece of reading material you make use of. The normal course of writing is to be explicit and direct and grammatical and generally easy to use. We like that. Occasionally a good writer will take some liberties and attempt some flow or pretend some substance via an affected linking of words or playing of metaphors. But generally speaking, nothing we read would trip the squiggly green underline of MS Word. We write according to rules and try not to get in our own way when conveying meaning via written language. This is a good thing and something for which I am all in favor.
But prose is not the end of everything. There is more out there in the dangerous world of thought and concept conveyance. For every 10 strictly photo-realistic portrayals of human experience, there exists at least one mad attempt at stretching the imaginations of a witness with a twisted shape or a crooked pallet of abstraction. In words, there is poetry.
The thing about poetry is that almost one hundred percent of it is smelly, puss-oozing, shit-stained crap. To give insight to my opinion, understand that I hold the same objections for abstract art. Jackson Pollock was a clever fraud even if VerMeer never touched a brush. Generally, poetry is too easy just as much as splashing paint on something may as well be an accident. Really good poetry is rare, even when the author takes great pains to make it great. Maybe even especially so. My idea of a really great poem is something like Blake’s burning tiger. Stuff like you read in 6th grade and maybe yawned at.
But those were clearly different times with different motivations and structures for rewarding or cursing those with a desire to string together words in an artful and compelling way. I don’t necessarily think that times and people are all that different today than they were 200 years ago when Coleridge doped himself up and wrote about sailors. I almost guarantee that he and dudes like Wordsworth would be equally successful in 2008 as they were in 18 whatever – but instead of straight written words, they most likely would’ve written songs. Or maybe commercials about fast-food and fizzy sugar water.
Regardless, poetry in the strictest definition of it is stupid crazy rare today. There’s just no market for it. Writing it is mostly an affectation of art-fagdom, not something someone seriously takes up as a form of self expression. People who might be good at it would simply take too much heat from their drinking buddies to ever write some shit down, much less share it with anyone who might read it. All that is probably for the best anyway.

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