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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
CrumpetsHarvey In reply to ??? [2010-06-24 13:52:04 +0000 UTC]
Hanky? Don't indulge the melancholia!
On the other hand, I am currently feeling guilty because I have so many stored up almost-poems, from years and years and years, that I feel like, instead of creating more almost-poems to add to the ever-expanding store which will sit in a folders taking up space and doing nothing, I really should go back and try to salvage something, drag it into a state of redemption.
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salshep In reply to CrumpetsHarvey [2010-06-26 11:19:01 +0000 UTC]
Have an absinthe, to go with.
And yes, you really should. I must, also. I started, lately, but found my heart slowing and ice forming on my back. I think I'll clean up the five that are any good and start a whole new batch, with some gumption.
I love the word 'gumption'.
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CrumpetsHarvey In reply to salshep [2010-06-26 11:29:46 +0000 UTC]
I needed the absinthe. Ta.
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somnomollior In reply to ??? [2010-06-24 10:42:11 +0000 UTC]
The worst fault that poetry can have, I think, is being boring. I glanced in a book at the library declaring itself to be a volume of the best Canadian poetry, and it was DULL. If a poem doesn't grab me in some way I don't want to read it through once, let alone many times. There are poems that I love that I have heard others mock for various reasons, but if they amuse, delight or move me in some way, I don't give a toss if someone else thinks they are sentimental, hackneyed, badly structured or ungrammatical - just don't be boring.
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salshep In reply to somnomollior [2010-06-26 11:15:32 +0000 UTC]
Dear gods- you should read what passes for "Best Australian Poetry" these past several years. Oi. 'Bout as lively as a busload of zombies. I really hate these things being in libraries, where people might find them and come to conclusion all Aussie poets write like that.
I guess it's an individual thing, though - I don't like the boring either, but flaws in craft make me flinch visibly.
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somnomollior In reply to salshep [2010-06-27 12:07:07 +0000 UTC]
There are certain 'flaws' that I can't tolerate in writing either. I hate 'gotten' when I come across it and have contemplated creating a 'gotten' wall of shame.In a translation of a Brazilian short story yesterday I came across it in the phrase "have gotten married"; even "have got married" is superfluous just "have married" would do fine. Also I hate the word 'careened' being used in ignorance for 'careered'. I have stopped reading books after a few pages because of that word. I was being not entirely truthful when I said as long as something isn't boring I am fine with it, although I suppose if the stories where I have given up because of the poor language skills had been more exciting I might have persevered.
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salshep In reply to somnomollior [2010-06-27 15:34:19 +0000 UTC]
Ah yes-- I have 'read through' a lot of flaws for the sake of a damned good story. Makes me wonder how they get to print like that. I look past it more often here, of course, where we don't expect perfection from everyone and so it irks me less. But in a published book? What are editors paid for, I wonder?
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stupidvagina In reply to ??? [2010-06-22 23:21:30 +0000 UTC]
christ, what a great wad of truth you've expelled here. although i feel no need for a hanky. you most likely won't if you've come to terms with the quicksand-y reality of poetry writing. the more you attempt to extricate yourself the more you sink, and the smell is nothing so great either. not to mention the other corpses in suspended animation around you, those superior poetic lines sacrificed to vicious, consuming mud.
so yes,
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salshep In reply to stupidvagina [2010-06-26 11:12:38 +0000 UTC]
Haha - smelly poetry!
I am, by the way, meaning to come by your poems and say hi. Please make me stop being so damn busy. They deserve some solid reading time.
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stupidvagina In reply to salshep [2010-06-26 13:38:46 +0000 UTC]
oh gosh, no worries. they're not going anywhere.
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ruffienne In reply to ??? [2010-06-21 04:40:12 +0000 UTC]
*sighs* Yes, hanky. Thanks.
(For the hanky, and for the comfort of knowing that there's other people who get it.)
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Drunken-Splice In reply to ??? [2010-06-20 11:52:18 +0000 UTC]
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
lol. Wow do I know that feeling.
Loved this article. Great advice for where I'm at right now. Especially now that I've graduated with my shiny new bachelors degree in Creative Writing, I feel like it's a good time to go back and do that last 5 years worth of stuff purging and figuring out how to go about things again with some kind of newness or naivité.
I'm printing this out and saving in my file of advice I really should think about more often.
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salshep In reply to Drunken-Splice [2010-06-21 11:34:25 +0000 UTC]
Hey, I'm really glad you found it useful. <3
Congrats, also, and ohmygod, the purge. Just don't delete things! Not permanently anyhow, you never know when they'll come back to life. Like revenent corpses.
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Drunken-Splice In reply to salshep [2010-06-21 17:07:29 +0000 UTC]
No no, no permanent deletion of the original txt files and such, just deleting from DA
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salshep In reply to eldestmuse [2010-06-20 11:10:07 +0000 UTC]
*sticks a Cheetoh on the thumb*
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eldestmuse In reply to salshep [2010-06-20 18:48:34 +0000 UTC]
Sorry, I just didn't have anything intelligent to say in response, but wanted to indicate that I did in fact read it.
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salshep In reply to eldestmuse [2010-06-20 20:30:57 +0000 UTC]
Ahaha, I was just in a silly mood.
and was like.. eating cheetos
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salshep In reply to nunheh [2010-06-20 11:09:38 +0000 UTC]
Hard work.
Wellies, and overalls. Large, tin mugs of tea.
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nunheh In reply to salshep [2010-06-20 12:29:31 +0000 UTC]
Jeans and T-shirts, boots and saddles, (I mean large quantities of Pepsi Max.)
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salshep In reply to Synith [2010-06-20 11:09:05 +0000 UTC]
Applecore!
There might be one, at that, I'm not quite done ranting yet.
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angeljunkie In reply to ??? [2010-06-19 17:15:49 +0000 UTC]
I was thinking through this how applicable it is to prose as well, and what a difficult lesson it is to learn. I know very well the little darlings can't come before the whole, but sometimes still there's that one or two I struggle with letting go of. It's all part of the process.
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salshep In reply to angeljunkie [2010-06-20 11:08:37 +0000 UTC]
Sometimes the darlings are just waiting for the right home, aslo, as I've discovered. My next article addresses this very thing, actually - or would, if I manage to write it.
Thanks!
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Sunshine-hime In reply to ??? [2010-06-19 16:42:15 +0000 UTC]
This, this is amazing! It's exactly what I feel like every time I write poetry, ya know? I get this one spark of inspiration from the great muse and then when I try to write a poem around it, everything goes wrong.
You give really good advice and I will definitely continue to apply it to my writing. Great prose!
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salshep In reply to Sunshine-hime [2010-06-20 11:07:33 +0000 UTC]
Oh, I -do- know, haha. I'm pleased this was useful to you.
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tigertailzlc In reply to ??? [2010-06-19 13:03:59 +0000 UTC]
This made me smile. It's so true. I'm not even a poet, but most of these things apply to prose, and indeed to everything else.
At least you actually had sharp sticks to defend your precious baby darlings against five years ago!
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salshep In reply to tigertailzlc [2010-06-20 11:06:54 +0000 UTC]
I hadn't thought of it in terms of prose, but I'm glad you found something for it, in this.
Omg, sticks -- I wept for two days once over a harsh crit on one of my darlings, from somebody I respected greatly. Two days! So ridiculous. Of course, the poem was sheerly ghastly and will never again see the light of day, but at the time it was the very pinnacle of my genius.
Lol.
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BeccaJS In reply to ??? [2010-06-19 10:52:07 +0000 UTC]
This article is like a cat of nine tales- it strikes hard, but leaves a worthwhile point
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salshep In reply to BeccaJS [2010-06-20 11:04:27 +0000 UTC]
You're so British, Becca.
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it.
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edzull In reply to ??? [2010-06-19 09:58:56 +0000 UTC]
I have had a line for two or three years. If all my poems are jigsaw puzzles of exotic locales, this line is a piece from the face of a president. It will never fit.
Every once in a while I think I've found that beautiful Mt. Rushmore of a poem that bridges the gap between my line and my poetry, but every time it turns out to be the friggin' Tokyo skyline.
I'll never use this line and so it will always be a tiny waste of precious brainspace. It's not even that good of a line.
Great article yo. Every bit of this is true, I especially love the open/closed hand bit, that is so important to recognize and remember.
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salshep In reply to edzull [2010-06-20 11:03:38 +0000 UTC]
I had a line like that, which I bandied about in that or that - and it finally found a home! It seems obvious now, that it ought to have been in that poem from the get-go. Ah, hindsight.
Thanks! And I love that hand thing, it's been such a help to me lately.
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