Posted on 12/27/2018 5:36:18 PM PST by mairdie
I will. (After I figure out how that works.)
I respect your opinion. Understand that I am an amateur. Please adjust your expectations accordingly.
P.S.
I read this last night. It might interest you:
“Is Poetry Really Dead?” by David Solway
https://pjmedia.com/lifestyle/is-poetry-really-dead/
“So, for phoneme pairs, a completely unconscious writing characteristic, Macs calculations showed that Account of a Visit from St. Nicholas sat firmly in Henrys camp at 64.912.”
This interests me immensely, if I understand it:
I spend a lot of time tasting (as I call it) different words for phonemic matching with other words in a line. I do it mentally and aloud.
My first default is to pick the word that most matches the meaning, but if two or more words would serve, then I go on tasting them, usually for a few days before decide.
“At the same time, I cant stand obscure for the sake of obscurity.”*
I share that attitude. I write to convey essential meaning, not meaninglessness.
Since I lack your education, I discover some poets incidentally (apart from the ones everyone encounters).
I first learned of Sidney Lanier by reading Macroscope, Piers Anthony’s first (and, I think, best) science fiction novel. Lanier is, very inventively, a pivotal character in absentia.
* Although I value her music immensely (it inspired me to compose), Tori Amos is an example of someone who drives people bats with her subjective and obscure lyrics.
She is undeniably a genius - youngest person ever accepted at the Berklee College of Music at age 5 - and a pianistic virtuoso, but her lyrics, although often sonically evocative, are mainly meaningful to herself alone.
(I also do not share her worldview at all - but then, I do not share the worldview of many classical composers either).
Heh. An apt analogy.
Don’t know if schooling made me love anything except Ionesco’s plays. Arnold I learned to love from the gentlemen who plied me with poetry. Ferlinghetti I discovered in a bookstore in Greenwich Village. Bookmarked Lanier and I’ll investigate. Since I’m a student of the Civil War, he sounds fascinating.
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