Spontaneity is overrated, in art as in life. Children are spontaneous and their productions are unlikely to please anyone but their doting parents. (I recall little of my sons’ wit and wisdom from their youngest days. Bright, entertaining kids but hardly Shakespeare.) When Hollywood shows a writer in thrall to his Muse, they give us a convulsive flurry of keyboard hammering. Visually speaking, writing is a bore. They seldom show forehead-wringing, perpetual revising, staring at the wall or consulting the dictionary.
There’s
an irony here, familiar to all honest writers. To lend poetry or prose the impression
of spontaneity is hard work, while a spew of words is likely to seem wordy, labored
and clumsy. So much for “spontaneous bop prosody” and our
inheritance from the Romantics (Keats worked slavishly). The late Clive James
writes in Poetry Notebook (2016):
“There
is a dangerous half-truth that has always haunted the practice and appreciation
of the arts: too much technique will inhibit creativity. Despite constant
evidence that too little technique will inhibit it worse, the idea never quite
dies, because it is politically too attractive.”
Thus,
Allen Ginsberg is a bore, Alexander Pope remains a thrill. A new literary
journal, Portico, publishes a poem by Boris Dralyuk, “Dino Dozes,”prefaced by a note: “In old age Dean Martin ate dinner every Sunday night at
the counter of the Hamburger Hamlet on Sunset Boulevard”:
“While
Dino dozes Jerry pulls new faces.
Skinny’s
backstage and mentions that the place is
crawling
with scouts. They need their act to click,
so
Jerry hones the fine points of his schtick.
Luck
is that part of art practice replaces.
“But
luck is Dino’s long suit. It embraces
his
ease and swagger, looms like an oasis
before
the average schmoes—they feel so slick
while
Dino dozes.
“Next
thing you know, he’s in the world’s good graces.
And
then he’s not. These days Dino retraces
his
groggy steps. One, two—ain’t that a kick?
All
gone. Not that he cared for it to stick.
What ghosts may rise the Hamlet’s Scotch erases
Boris crafts a conversational ease, anecdotal casualness, a good story between friends. It could have been slop, little more than Hollywood gossip. Clive James goes on:
“The
elementary truth that there are levels of imagination that a poet won’t reach
unless formal restrictions force him to has largely been supplanted . . . by a more
sophisticated (though far less intelligent) conviction that freedom of
expression is more likely to be attained through letting the structure follow
the impulse.”