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| Steven Waling |
Posted: Nov 3 2009, 01:59 PM
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Dark Matter Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 687 Member No.: 190 Joined: 28-June 07 |
It's not the job of poetry to be meaningful but to be beautiful.
(Adapted from something Kenneth Koch said) Discuss (with examples, brickbats, insults etc etc) |
| sorlil |
Posted: Nov 3 2009, 03:39 PM
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Love-Child of the Muse Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 70 Member No.: 330 Joined: 28-January 08 |
Similar to this Basil Bunting quote which I have at the top of my poetry blog: "Poetry is seeking to make not meaning, but beauty".
Obviously I agree with it but I'd always interpreted meaning here as narrative whereas your Koch statement sounds like he's saying beautiful but meaningless. I rarely write straightforward narrative poems but that doesn't mean that they are meaningless it's just that meaning isn't top, second or even third priority. It's beauty in poetry that attracts me the most, I'm not at all bothered if I don't get the meaning. I loved Plath and Eliot long before what I knew what their poems were about. I'm not sure how common or popular this view is in the UK poetry scene, it seems to me a more American thing, of course I may be entirely wrong! -------------------- Marion M
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| C.J.Underwood |
Posted: Nov 3 2009, 03:54 PM
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![]() Red Giant Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 149 Member No.: 474 Joined: 14-May 08 |
It is the duty of poetry to be both or either.
As long as it is good poetry nothing else matters. -------------------- |
| Chris Hamilton-Emery |
Posted: Nov 3 2009, 04:12 PM
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![]() Practically Homer Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 1,197 Member No.: 27 Joined: 25-April 06 |
I think the chief purpose of poetry is to hate prose.
After that it's to be jealous and insecure and a bit deaf. Finally, it must be obsessed with cake, oral hygiene and show a penchant for soup and pins. I think readers “mean”, in the sense that it’s not an inherent quality of a text? Texts aren’t piled up in a corner, sat meaning together or even meaning separately, even. Busy busy busy, mean mean mean. Meaning can only be understood as an act of readership. As far as I’m aware texts don't read themselves Beauty should be left to Estée Lauder, dontcha know. Or perhaps L'Oréal — “Because you verse it.” -------------------- Salt Audio Books — for literature on the move or in the classroom
http://www.saltpublishing.com/books/audio/ Catch up with the new Salt blog: http://blog.saltpublishing.com/ Buy every Salt book from John Sandoe (Books) Ltd in Chelsea |
| mgranier |
Posted: Nov 3 2009, 04:19 PM
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Opus Posthumous Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 782 Member No.: 264 Joined: 11-September 07 |
'There is no wing like meaning.'
Wallace Stevens or, regarding the offstream: There is no wing like meanness. |
| Rik Roots |
Posted: Nov 3 2009, 07:06 PM
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![]() Entirely redundant Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 444 Member No.: 184 Joined: 25-June 07 |
It's not the job of people to be meaningful but to be beautiful.
That's better. -------------------- The Poetry Advent Calendar: presenting a new poem each day 1-24 Dec to help get you in the mood for the forthcoming festivities
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| Andrew Philip |
Posted: Nov 3 2009, 08:10 PM
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![]() Red Giant Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 129 Member No.: 390 Joined: 11-April 08 |
A poem should be mean, not twee.
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| KEB |
Posted: Nov 5 2009, 01:30 PM
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Dark Matter Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 670 Member No.: 11 Joined: 23-April 06 |
I'm not really sure how, in art, you would go about separating "meaning" from "beautiful." Isn't the whole point of a work of art to create a new kind of meaning, and through that to be beautiful?
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| Steven Waling |
Posted: Nov 6 2009, 10:27 AM
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Dark Matter Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 687 Member No.: 190 Joined: 28-June 07 |
Or, through creating a new kind of beauty we reach a new kind of meaning.
I don't think you can separate the two either, I don't think anybody does. But I rarely start a poem these days thinking about what it's about or what it means. I think about how one line sounds interesting, or beautiful, against another line, and through that reach for a kind of meaning. Sometimes I don't know what a poem means until much later. |
| Jane Holland |
Posted: Nov 6 2009, 11:19 AM
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Administrator Group: The Boss Posts: 2,946 Member No.: 1 Joined: 22-April 06 |
I'm well on track here. The drugs are working. Pain is not absent, but is far more manageable than this time last week. Expect a return to form within a few days! Beauty/meaning? With song lyrics, meaning is either unimportant or massively underpinned by rhythm and melody. Is the same true of poems? -------------------- Editor of online arts magazine Horizon Review.
'CAMPER VAN BLUES' - my latest from Salt. Visit my writing blog Raw Light or home page. |
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| mgranier |
Posted: Nov 6 2009, 11:35 AM
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Opus Posthumous Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 782 Member No.: 264 Joined: 11-September 07 |
Not at all the same, of course (a rhetorical question?). But one could argue that everything in a good poem, metrical or otherwise, is underpinned by rhythm. As for melody, depends naturally; as Fenton and others have remarked, much of Dickinson's work can be sung to the tune of The Yellow Rose of Texas. Glad the drugs are working; I had an abscess once: pain was spectacular. |
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