Most bores are not aware they are boring. It’s not always their fault and the impulse to tell them they are boring, though understandable, is almost always a waste of time. You can’t make people interesting who value their humorlessness, bad taste and stridency.
I woke the other morning
internally singing these words, perhaps left over from a dream: ‘’I saw
Eternity the other night, / Like a great ring of pure and endless light, / All
calm, as it was bright.” I still thrill at these lines, some fifty years after I
first encountered them in Alfred Kazin’s A Walker in the City (1951).
They are the opening to Henry Vaughan’s “The World” (c. 1650). It’s
the casualness of “the other night” coupled with Vaughan’s glimpse of eternity that
rouses and delights me. Mystics often resort to inarticulate enthusiasm. Their
experiences defy language, so they yawp, the linguistic equivalent of the early
Shakers writhing on the floor. In contrast, Vaughan might be recounting this
morning’s breakfast. His tone is calm, methodical, almost journalistic, the
meter regular and yet conversational.
These are lessons lost on
most contemporary poets. Their verse is prose and thus defies memorization,
unlike Vaughan’s, whose poem I never set out to memorize but did. In a recent review of a volume by Jonathan Chaves, the poet Catharine Savage Brosman writes:
“To say that poetry in
America now, though honored by public budgetary support and widely heralded, is
largely superficial and ephemeral is not unfair. . . . Like other rhetorical
performances, a poetic flash in the pan, a pleasing act of verbal
prestidigitation, a strident accusation of injustice, a cry on the rooftops for
change may attract admiration and assent; they are not in themselves good
poetry. Poetry is an art.”
To intentionally write badly
and impose it on others is the definition of artistic narcissism and, incidentally, tedium.
Many have convinced themselves they are writing poetry. Trying to argue them
out of their delusion is a waste of time. The effort would require them to
rehabilitate their sensibilities, and that’s a lot of work. They want the leftover
Romantic “prestige” associated with being a poet without the learning, discipline
and dedication required. Brosman again:
“Nearly empty of sense,
solipsistic, without appealing use of language, much contemporary writing
called poetry is imitative, facile, accusatory. Of course, bad poetry has
always been around. But new means of disseminating it, wealth to underwrite and
popularize it, and the general degradation of culture have made a difference.”
In another recent essay, “Poetry and Western Civilization,” Brosman writes: “Poetry belongs to those enterprises
which examine and preserve the past, while sifting and shaping facts to create
understanding, so that human beings may know themselves and comprehend their
destiny better.”