HOME | DD
Published: 2010-06-19 09:29:22 +0000 UTC; Views: 15838; Favourites: 345; Downloads: 341
Redirect to original
Description
Poets are constantly crippled, creatively. It's the way it works. You write a line and, just now, right now, it seems like it's the best line in the world to date. It's a shiny, beautiful line, a thought, an image so remarkably profound that you are in awe of yourself, or (if you are a seasoned poet) in awe of that angelic being which sits on high in your mind and occasionally drops little scraps of poetic manna into your head. Now, you only need to write a poem around it.And fail.
Because the poem takes over, sprouts a million legs and scurries in directions you had no real intention of it going – and now the Wondrous Line of Glory and Poetic Win doesn't fit. You have to either change it or take it out and save it for another poem. Or make it a haiku-like short poem on its own, so all those other words don't assault it again. If you're an experienced poet, you'll probably just store it in a .txt file or on a post-it note somewhere and lament it until you're old and nothing matters any more.
Or you take the poem and break all of its legs, and put it into forced labour to serve this tiny god of a phrase or line, which it does unwillingly and badly and the poem is just shite as a result, and you go sour on the idea and scrap it, or worse – post it up as your latest bit of genius and consider all criticism of its glory a kind of drooling madness that people really ought to be cured of.
It's really important, as a poet, to take the approach of the closed fist VS. the open hand. It's an old Buddhist thing, grasshopper, which goes something like this:
"If your hand is closed tightly around one coin, it is not open to receive a fortune. If the hand is always open, everything will fall out of it. Be flexible. Open and close your hand, as necessary."
Or, as Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch so aptly put it: "Murder your darlings."
Clinging for your life to these bits of brilliance you write and so admire, or to the one style of poetry you feel 'fits' you, is to kneecap yourself creatively. I see it in a great many inexperienced poets (and not at all infrequently in better ones and worse, in myself) and it can become a vast stumbling-block in one's progress as a writer.
This is not to say that those styles, ideas, lines and phrases that we so adore and are excited about need be thrown out for creative poison – I don't believe we must literally "murder" our darlings. What I mean is: be flexible. Let go of your genius, try something daring. Hold a beginner's mind, let yourself see that your Emperor of a poem is wearing no clothes (except, perhaps one shiny and incongruous silk scarf).
It can be crushing to admit that your style doesn't suit your idea, that your image doesn't gel, that your phrase is out-of-place – that all the elements of your shiny, new poem simply are not working together as they should to make it the Very Good poem it ought to be and – in your head – is (albeit, sadly, nowhere else). It can be depressing. It hurts, sometimes a lot.
That's why the majority of poets are terribly emo, and why they're all so arrogant on the outside— we criticise ourselves so often and so thoroughly, it's like twenty lashes to hear someone else say it. The arrogance is really prophylactic against the pain we feel in our freshly-salted wounds.
But all the very best poets (aside from being dismal masochists) know that they have to get past that very damaging and limiting layer of self-protection and grow creatively, by letting go of all their rigid habits, and ideas, and opinions. Not all at once (that's a ticket to a padded room, if ever I heard of one) but as they come up, possibly over and over, in increments, one at a time.
It's not easy, and may lead to bouts of depressive mania in which one is likely to delete all former work as tedious rubbish and then drink a bottle of absinthe while listening to Muse and weeping into a hanky.
Then, when you sober up, if you're smart, you scrabble to recover the files or sticky-tape together all those torn pages, get over yourself a little and get back to work with the intent of learning why the poem isn't working, and admit that maybe all those people pointing out the faults of the piece are not evil bastards trying to destroy your poetic soul but are right, and trying to be helpful, and really you knew, deep down, anyway, that it wasn't working. But perhaps something can be salvaged.
Or perhaps not. I recently went on a rampage of reading through five years' worth of poems and have not laughed (nor snivelled) quite so much in ages as looking at my early poems through the eyes of hindsight. What utter rubbish they are! And worse— how I once defended them, coddled them, clung to them, my precious baby darlings, the apples of my creative eye. And now I am, myself, one of those horrid people who see, and poke sharp sticks at, all their flaws. It's tragic. It's hilarious.
There comes that point where you realise that in order to fix your poor, kneecapped poem perhaps you ought to take a few weeks (months, years) to study the mechanics of sonics, meter, enjambment and so on, and read tons more poetry written by Very Successful poets so you can see how they made their poems work. And then rewrite the thing, from scratch if necessary. Or simply leave it for dead and move along to the next effort.
It's what I call "the hard work of poetry" – precisely because that's what it is. You are not perfect and never will be, and neither will your work be, so accept that— and view every piece you write as a tiny, tiny, stepping-stone to somewhere better, and nothing more.
You'll be a happier (and better) poet for it. Hopefully.
Hanky?
Related content
Comments: 236
lost-darkness In reply to ??? [2010-06-27 05:04:18 +0000 UTC]
I like the point that you dig into your piece here. And while I read, I had to think-- "Gee, now if only artists of ALL kinds would read and learn from this, not just poets."
Because you get that kind of coddling/harsh defending from artists of all kinds, not just poets. That palette may never work with that concept; maybe the artist in question really does need to go back over their introductory art notes. Or maybe take it in the first place.
In other words, this is a great, multi-purpose piece, and I love it.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to lost-darkness [2010-06-28 03:40:48 +0000 UTC]
Thanks very much, glad you enjoyed it. And yes, pig-headedness is a human condition, I think
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
lost-darkness In reply to salshep [2010-06-28 03:55:07 +0000 UTC]
I have to agree. Human arrogance is a common trait in all of us. I guess that's what makes humility seem like such a virtue.
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
GreeniePixie019 In reply to ??? [2010-06-27 04:44:30 +0000 UTC]
I think one f the best things in poetry is when you come up with really interesting you line you go hmmm.. poetic.. then build on it what else are you experiencing do you want to describe the image? or do you just want to build off that funky little line and see what comes of it? did it work? perhaps it needs a little re arranging a different phrasing ^ ^* easier done in poetry than full blown books (theres simply less to edit). that was funny to read! Great advice!
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to GreeniePixie019 [2010-06-28 03:39:18 +0000 UTC]
Thankyou - and I think really that's what those shiny lines we can't place are for - inspiration. Or at least that's what I tell myself.
I think sometimes we need to grow into them, too.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
GreeniePixie019 In reply to salshep [2010-06-28 05:40:37 +0000 UTC]
yes they're inspiration for something more you have to be patient and work with them and pick out the bits and pieces that have a flow and that make sense and rework it think on it some up with more edit it XD
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
edward133 [2010-06-27 03:56:43 +0000 UTC]
This is absolutely, amazingly true! I love you! (Not in a creepy way. But like a role model or something)
May I have permission to post this on my Facebook if I make sure it's known that you wrote this? This really says a lot to me. And I think it'll will say a lot to some people I know as well..
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
A-Symmetry [2010-06-27 03:14:31 +0000 UTC]
Speaks to me.
I have countless .txt files filling my desktop and post-its in the strangest and forgotten areas of my room.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to A-Symmetry [2010-06-27 03:23:43 +0000 UTC]
Are some of those txt files named really odd things?
One of mine: "nosecritters.txt."
It has three lines about flowers. Not good ones.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
A-Symmetry In reply to salshep [2010-06-27 03:54:12 +0000 UTC]
one of mine says:
keepthisdonotdeleteespwhencomputercrashes.txt
I always use notepad because my MS word is glitchy.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to A-Symmetry [2010-06-27 04:19:23 +0000 UTC]
yeah, same - and I like the simplicity of it, no clutter.
and lol, that title
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
A-Symmetry In reply to salshep [2010-06-27 04:22:59 +0000 UTC]
And it's fast, too.
Everything's simple in notepad.
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
salshep In reply to TsukiTay [2010-06-27 03:04:50 +0000 UTC]
It's just a part of the process, I think. And the pain is kind of necessary and not too bad if you don't mess about. Like ripping bandaids off ><
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
errollovering [2010-06-27 02:31:46 +0000 UTC]
I'm from the school of very hard knocks. Vietnam, Bosnia, 2 failed marriages..............I think poetry comes from pain, life is pain. pain teaches. You inspired me to read some old poems..........................I did not laugh. You have very wise words and I applaud you for it. I'm not a Xian, Muslim, but an Asatruar and it has brought to me some reality.....Ragnarok, love, hope. Thanks.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to errollovering [2010-06-27 03:09:13 +0000 UTC]
Thankyou very much, and what you say is quite true, about pain being a teacher. I laughed at my old poems less because they were not well written (though that was a factor, for sure in some) but at myself, and how stubborn I was in holding onto things that were not working.
I'm sorry things were hard for you, but you have that wisdom not everyone has because of it, and as you know, knowledge is more profound when hard-earned through actual experience.
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
sariadragon [2010-06-27 02:13:21 +0000 UTC]
this is so true... and i never really realized it... your rant helped me out... thanks!!
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to sariadragon [2010-06-27 03:11:08 +0000 UTC]
Hey, I am sooo glad it did. Thanks for reading!
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
dusqueRoyale In reply to ??? [2010-06-27 01:56:03 +0000 UTC]
it's ok to share burdens like these with the world--after all, life is an experience we all share, whether it be an essay about poetry and the mishaps thereof or simple events like laughter. Well shared, dear.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
verticalness In reply to ??? [2010-06-27 01:08:36 +0000 UTC]
This is at once enjoyable and thought-provoking. Well-deserved DD.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to verticalness [2010-06-27 03:11:41 +0000 UTC]
Thanks, I'm glad you enjoyed it.
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
Swords-and-Bandages In reply to ??? [2010-06-27 01:02:39 +0000 UTC]
Well, I really don't know what to say. Other than that it was well worth reading, and was great advice. If I say anymore I'd sound trite.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to Swords-and-Bandages [2010-06-27 03:12:24 +0000 UTC]
You must be a poet! Only we care about using too many words
Thanks much for reading, and commenting!
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Swords-and-Bandages In reply to salshep [2010-06-27 04:13:48 +0000 UTC]
You have very sharp powers of deduction. You nailed it.
You're welcome.
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
tattoofuzzy [2010-06-27 00:43:49 +0000 UTC]
Wow harsh truth. But that's the hell of writing poetry. Great article!
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
tattoofuzzy In reply to salshep [2010-06-27 03:18:20 +0000 UTC]
you're very welcome. Some of the things you've said like letting go of an idea because it just will not fit anywhere, or remaining open to different styles I've already basically accepted. Some of the others I'm not quite sure how to go about doing at this point in my life. Like seriously studying successful poets work. Mainly cuz i work way too much. Gah.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to tattoofuzzy [2010-06-27 03:34:44 +0000 UTC]
Doesn't it suck when life gets in the way of art?
Really, serious study can simply be picking up one new book of poetry a month and taking it with you on the bus. Simply appreciating a lot good writing, regularly, is a sneaky (if a little slow) way to teach yourself what a good poem is, and how they work.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
tattoofuzzy In reply to salshep [2010-06-27 03:53:25 +0000 UTC]
Oddly enough I have several poetry books but i haven't had time to pick them up lately. I don't take any buses. Bus drivers down here are complete crap.
I do appreciate good writing when i find time to. Thank you though
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
IFeltHope44 [2010-06-27 00:27:09 +0000 UTC]
Or perhaps not. I recently went on a rampage of reading through five years' worth of poems and have not laughed (nor snivelled) quite so much in ages as looking at my early poems through the eyes of hindsight. What utter rubbish they are! And worse— how I once defended them, coddled them, clung to them, my precious baby darlings, the apples of my creative eye. And now I am, myself, one of those horrid people who see, and poke sharp sticks at, all their flaws. It's tragic. It's hilarious.
I'm no where near to being even a decent poet, seeing as I am only in my second year of high school, but the drastic changes between my current writing and writing from just a year ago never fail to amaze and disgust me.
Very nice and very true.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to IFeltHope44 [2010-06-27 03:14:00 +0000 UTC]
I said to someone earlier, that this is the kind of realisation that will do more for you as a writer than writing a thousand poems. Good luck with your writing, and keep at it, and thanks!
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
ElaineRose [2010-06-27 00:23:21 +0000 UTC]
Oh dear goodness, I love seeing a piece of educational/inspirational critique on writing. I haven’t been this excited since I saw this talk on writing/inspiration/why creativity has been killing creative people for generations (if you have 20 minutes, it's really good <[link] !>).
Man, I don't think I've written a single poem since sophomore year of high school, and goodness knows those were fairly worthless.
But this essay spoke to me so clearly as a novelist. Yes, the battles for novel writing and poetry are quite different (extremely careful word choice, meter, line structure, and sound aren't often what make or break a novel), but the principles are often the same. I can't count how many times I've started a story on the Super-Awesome-Mega-Incredible-Ultimate-Opening Line/Character/Story Concept/etc. There's plenty of unmarked plots in my novel graveyard that I have no desire in my current state to go digging up, except perhaps to salt and burn the remains (but that's a rare sentiment). Partially that's because I've moved on to better things (like finishing a manuscript), and partially it's because I just can't look back on my early work without getting queasy (not to the laughing stage yet).
And perhaps this resonates on a different level with me, because writing novels (and going to classes to learn more about the craft and industry) really colors one's expectation of the creative process: writing a novel is typically about two things: (1) get it out of my head before it can eat my brain, and (2) get it published so it can eat other people's brains [and thus was born fanfiction.net]. But on the whole publishing thing--the book can't be my baby anymore. It's my product. It's my introduction-can't-be-fifty-pages-out-of-a-hundred (single spaced) product. It's my conflict-on-every-page-and-the-story-is-only-as-good-as-its-villain product. It's my No-The-Super-Awesome-Mega-Incredible-Ultimate-Whatever-It-Is-Really-ISN'T, unless it actually is, Product. It's my let's-just-admit-the-flaws-and-slog-through-fixing-them Product. And the product never sells if I'm so hung up on my can-of-worms plot coming off of the Wondrous Line of Glory and Poetic Win, so to speak. The writing process is a lot about carefully and gently murdering your darlings so the finished product is something to be proud of (whether it sells or not). Writing is a lot of hard work.
And, honestly, I don't envy the much harder work that I perceive poetry to be. Congratulations on being one of those amazing people who can make it work.
And thank you so much for this wonderful article. It's going to be an amazing help, and it's very well written.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to ElaineRose [2010-06-27 03:17:11 +0000 UTC]
I really am pleased that prose writers and other artists can find something useful here, as well.
You're very welcome, and thanks for reading and your wonderful comment.
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
RookinherRookery [2010-06-27 00:08:07 +0000 UTC]
God damn, you have it down. Get outta my head! ^_^ I tend to get angry rather than mopey, but this is a wonderful explanation of the process, the torture, the glee, every bit of it with such clarity and grace. Thanks for posting this. I'm favoriting it, saving it, and gonna remember it.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to RookinherRookery [2010-06-27 03:15:17 +0000 UTC]
haha, thanks (I'll try not to beam this into your mind directly, okay?)
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
RookinherRookery In reply to salshep [2010-06-27 06:49:54 +0000 UTC]
You carved a niche with that other poem I just favorited! Whoo, still spinning with that one.
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
salshep In reply to Fire-Chan9490 [2010-06-27 03:14:38 +0000 UTC]
That weeps into hankies, or loves you? o.O
Lol. Thanks very much.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Fire-Chan9490 In reply to salshep [2010-06-27 12:23:36 +0000 UTC]
The only one who tries to construct poems around pretty lines and epically fails. XD
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to Fire-Chan9490 [2010-06-27 15:43:54 +0000 UTC]
Haha, no, you are in a crowd there, I think.
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
AshleyKerins [2010-06-26 23:56:58 +0000 UTC]
I gotta say.. I did the same thing with Art. Clung onto little mini victories that I'd made in my past and protected them sooooo much. Now, I just look back on it all and toss it to the side. I thought I was being myself, drawing my own things, but now its like a massive step back to look at it all and realise how much I was just following the crowd and its like.. all the effort I put in at the time has just been washed away and I'm just not passionate about the old stuff anymore.
pretty much the last part of your entry applies here. I know nothing about poetry though, but I got an idea from this text. =]
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
salshep In reply to AshleyKerins [2010-06-27 15:42:50 +0000 UTC]
It's very, very difficult to get to that point and not think: "Oh my god, what a horrible waste of time", but really that's just the self-importance kicking in again, I mean - it never is a waste of time, is it, the pursuing of a craft, all those hours of diligent learning and enjoyment? I see the past five years of my writing as the best years, creatively speaking, of my life. But yeah, I had that hanky-out moment of "oh no..".
You also make a very good point about 'stepping back' and assessing your work objectively, as to influences, quality, etc.
Thanks, that was a very thoughtful response.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
| Next =>