Poetry: Some #1 Things to Look Out For Before handing in material for workshop, check for at least a few of these problems:
Don't confuse "rich" and "universal" and "resonant" with plain old vague, overgeneralized writing.
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No verbal texture. No sensory feel or pleasure in the diction, phrasing, syntax.
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No meaningful lineation (line breaks are willy-nilly or actually work against feeling and sense).
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Weak rhyme or ill distribution of rhyme:
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Rhymes occur only at ends of lines.
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Rhymes are too "jouncy-bouncy"; do not mesh with the poem's feeling and sense.
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Rhymes are too easy or predictable.
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Types of rhyme are limited and don't engage the ear. Nothing but exact and masculine rhymes.
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Rhymes are forced; sentence syntax is skewed to make end rhymes come out. Don't invert syntax to force an end rhyme.
HEY! Not every poem has to be brilliant and earth-shattering—far from it. But every poem should have something, some spark, some attention to the gifts of language. * "Sentimentality" =
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Foregone rather than discovered sentiment.
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Sentiment which the writer seems to congratulate herself for having.
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Sentiment which is stale, has not been made alive again or discovered anew.
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An unearned implicit claim by the speaker to be feeling something (no detail, no surprise, no associative drama or struggle in the poem authenticates the claim).
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A failure of the imagination to engage real, live, ongoing issues—emotional, intellectual, spiritual, physical—on the page.
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An overly easy acceptance of solutions to those issues.
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NO DUENDE! What's Goin' On? Beginner poems are often a string of broad generalities and abstractions with no context. Often, the implicit point of such poems is to provide the reader a sort of open reverie. ("I left my poem vague so the reader can get whatever she wants out of it.") There's nothing wrong with open reverie, but you can get that completely on your own— ice-fishing, jerking off, skimming tabloid headlines in a check-out line... If you've left your poem so general that it could mean anything—then it means nothing. The reader might as well go stare at a tree. A poem should have something "going on," as we used to say in the 70s. A glimpse into the mind and heart of the writer—a strange and separate human being. Specific, real, unexpected details and images. Interesting language. Moving language. Odd feelings. Formal experiment. Wit. Brains. Subtlety. Voltage. Hell, if nothing else, give us sheer weirdness.
So. Get going. On. |