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Published: 2010-06-19 09:29:22 +0000 UTC; Views: 15838; Favourites: 345; Downloads: 341
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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?
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Comments: 236
salshep In reply to ??? [2010-06-27 01:10:37 +0000 UTC]
I'm glad you do! Thanks to you, also.
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GwenavhyeurAnastasia In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 18:40:57 +0000 UTC]
This is quite possibly the best time for this to come up. It's summer over here, and I've been focusing far too much on prose lately. The poetry can use some fixing. Going to go have a good look at my poems, even the dreadful things from two years ago that make me facepalm and wonder how I ever wrote like that. What hell artists put themselves through.
Thanks for writing.
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salshep In reply to GwenavhyeurAnastasia [2010-06-27 01:10:15 +0000 UTC]
Haha, wear a dust mask? And yeah, we got the market for self-torture wrapped up, that's for sure.
Thanks for reading, hun - and link me some of those revised poems in my journal, when they're done, yeah?
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Secrets-Of-Paranoia In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 18:25:04 +0000 UTC]
Great poem, a witty and painfully honest look at gaining experience and ability to write poetry and the silly protectiveness we show over even the smallest bits of our writings. ^^ I like that while it was a truth some would like to be ignorant of, it's not bitter, nor is it cynical; It's realistic. Some people will not really understand this, because they refuse to listen to truths that are not sympathetic to thme. (Who said that? Someone famous, I'm sure, I don't recall. )
But nevertheless enjoyable to read, and a reminder that beginners still have a long path waiting for them, and that if they don't like their skill level, they aren't doomed to it forever. ^^ Funny, thoughtful, and terribly, terribly true. ^^
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salshep In reply to Secrets-Of-Paranoia [2010-06-27 01:09:01 +0000 UTC]
Ah well, it was written for those who'll read it, you could say. I've learned not to fret so much over the ones who don't want to learn anything - not my problem if they don't, and I could be writing instead.
Thanks so much for your thoughts, and happy writing.
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bookeagle123 In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 17:43:00 +0000 UTC]
This is so absurdly true. I have never come across anyone who has put it so clearly. These oh so lovely lines come into my mind and then, when I try to put them into poetry, they so completely fail. Most of the time these "poetic" and "deep" lines are nothing but cleverly placed words or mildly interesting metaphors, but even the ones that actually may be worth reading later on are manipulated and twisted so they loose their meaning while trying to fit in a poem. Thank you for writing this because it really sums up all the key points of writing and artistry in general for me!
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salshep In reply to bookeagle123 [2010-06-27 01:06:58 +0000 UTC]
That's why I keep all the .txt files and post-its and scraps - those lines are often inspiring for later work. Frustrating buggers, though.
Thanks for reading!
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Junedoggydogg1 In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 17:16:44 +0000 UTC]
wow... this is so deep, and true... well-deserving of a DD... I really need to read this over again, when I think of writing my poetry...
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salshep In reply to Junedoggydogg1 [2010-06-27 01:05:36 +0000 UTC]
I'm very pleased you found it useful, and thanks!
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Junedoggydogg1 In reply to salshep [2010-06-27 02:57:14 +0000 UTC]
thank you very much for writing something like this here... and you're welcome ^^
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Alizabith In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 16:59:28 +0000 UTC]
Oh, ye gods, a voice of reason!
Poetry is not easy. The people who think it is aren't writing it.
Sometimes it's best to have someone you know will tell the truth (and this, many people fail to see, cannot be one's mom) tear the poem apart and hand you the pieces. And, occasionally, you have to be the one to do it. Honestly.
Thanks for sharing this. We need to hear it.
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salshep In reply to Alizabith [2010-06-27 01:05:07 +0000 UTC]
Poetry is not easy. The people who think it is aren't writing it
Right on. Though sometimes it's easier than others. Inspired moments, for the win, but that's where knowing what the craft is comes in handy, you don't have to stop and think about it too hard (yes, those are rare moments, but don't they rock?).
That truth thing - that's why I hang with the people I do on dA. I can trust them to not pull any punches, but also give praise where it'd due - though that can be hard to take sometimes, also, oddly enough, ha.
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WocketPocket99 In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 16:26:22 +0000 UTC]
Hmm. Prose is more along the lines of trouble I face, rather than poetry. Still, taking the older definition of "poet" into consideration...how true. How very true.
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salshep In reply to WocketPocket99 [2010-06-26 16:33:17 +0000 UTC]
Glad you found something to click with, here.
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salshep In reply to magbhitu [2010-06-26 16:24:53 +0000 UTC]
I think it can apply to any art, but poetry is mine.
Have an absinthe?
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SereneScientist In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 16:23:25 +0000 UTC]
A really wonderful expression of what poetry is! And in a way, part of what you say has to do with life too. "Be flexible. Open and close your hand, as necessary."
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salshep In reply to SereneScientist [2010-06-26 16:26:10 +0000 UTC]
Thankyou - and yes, that quote was originally from a Buddhist story about money. The monk was speaking to a miserly woman, who came to him for advice.
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SereneScientist In reply to salshep [2010-06-27 02:16:00 +0000 UTC]
It's a very wise story and a valuable lesson.
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Lit-Twitter In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 16:13:24 +0000 UTC]
Chirp, it's been twittered. [link]
And it's insulting when writers cops out and tries to make a good line into a 'haiku'. Like "boo hoo, I couldn't make it a car, so let's insult someone else's craft and make it a mini dirtbike". Or some random angry metaphor to that effect.
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salshep In reply to Lit-Twitter [2010-06-26 16:28:22 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! And yeah - there's a million wanna-ku's out there, just begging to be proper poems. A real haiku, or an effective short-short poem never leaves me with that feeling - "but I want this to be more!"
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Thoughtful-Writer In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 15:42:22 +0000 UTC]
okay now I just need to figure out how to rewrite my poem...
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salshep In reply to Thoughtful-Writer [2010-06-26 15:47:37 +0000 UTC]
Are you having trouble with it?
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Thoughtful-Writer In reply to salshep [2010-06-27 00:34:57 +0000 UTC]
Well I'm having trouble with my writing in general.
I'm not happy with my style.
I seem to have to have no poetry to prose and class either.
And my poetry lacks rhyme or reason.
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salshep In reply to Thoughtful-Writer [2010-06-27 01:12:34 +0000 UTC]
I'll come take a look, if you like? Link a couple pieces in my journal, and we'll see what we can do.
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zoemua In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 13:26:14 +0000 UTC]
incredible... it applies to me very good... Lines get lost in time! XD
I would give u another comment later...XD I would read it again...
but I still love it!
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daymoose In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 12:47:50 +0000 UTC]
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.
story of my life, dude.
i really like this. because it reminds me, once again, that in order to write well i need to be open-minded and not cling so stubbornly to ideas just because i happen to like them at the time.
thanks for writing this =]
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salshep In reply to daymoose [2010-06-26 12:59:52 +0000 UTC]
You're welcome, thank you for reading,and I'm glad you found some use in it.
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SingingRiver In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 10:01:12 +0000 UTC]
I think many writers will recognise this when they read this. I loved reading this. It sounded like not only a lesson for writers, but a lesson for life in general ^^.
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salshep In reply to SingingRiver [2010-06-26 11:27:51 +0000 UTC]
I'm glad you found it useful!
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kalistina In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 09:39:27 +0000 UTC]
This was enlightening. Really. Thanks!
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SilverDolphin [2010-06-26 09:38:39 +0000 UTC]
"... view every piece you write as a tiny, tiny, stepping-stone to somewhere better, and nothing more."
I'm a prose-writer, not really a poet, but that's one of the most useful pieces of advice I think I've ever been given. I think that a lot of writers in general get so caught up on their writing not being PERFECT that they can fall into the trap of being afraid to write anything at all (I seem to live almost permanently in this trap, in fact). Thanks for reminding me that - to use the overdone but apt cliche - it's the journey and not the destination that counts.
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salshep In reply to SilverDolphin [2010-06-26 11:26:20 +0000 UTC]
Well yeah, I'm really glad you raised that point. That clinginess to "perfection" (coupled with a profound unwillingness to admit I knew nothing at all about the -craft- of writing, or to actually do anything about that) was what stopped me writing for literally half my life. "I can't be perfect, so I won't write. I won't write or admit I'm at beginner level, so I can't get better at it. Oi."
I ain't getting all those writeless years back, either. That sort of paralysis is so awful. Thanks, and I'm glad you found something useful here.
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Leurindal In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 08:31:01 +0000 UTC]
sad but true. well-said
happier? I doubt that.
better? Hopefully
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salshep In reply to Leurindal [2010-06-26 11:22:06 +0000 UTC]
Here - *passes the absinthe bottle and a box of hankies* - if you can't beat it, get into it and make it a poem series.
Thanks, I'm glad you enjoyed the article.
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Leurindal In reply to salshep [2010-06-27 18:26:17 +0000 UTC]
nah, absinthe just makes the heart grow fonder, and fondness between a poet and his poems is just plain wrong. I'll take the hankies though, thank you
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Just-Raowolf In reply to ??? [2010-06-26 08:26:45 +0000 UTC]
That is very useful, and I guess I've never really considered things this way before. I hope it will help; thank-you. You did brilliantly.
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salshep In reply to Just-Raowolf [2010-06-26 11:20:02 +0000 UTC]
I hope it will, too. I'm very glad you found it useful.
And thank you, also!
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