A thought that never occurred to me but feels self-evidently right:
“In the
course of a reading life, one often stumbles on excellent prose writers never
before encountered; such discoveries, however, are less likely in poetry.
First-rate poetry is a more manageable quantity. Unlike with prose, it is
possible to read all, or virtually all, of the decent verse in the language.”
Perhaps it’s
because poetry is somehow more vulnerable than prose, its form more essential
to its nature. For attentive readers, bad verse immediately announces its wretchedness, whether from narcissism or a tin ear. The ability to write
first-rate poetry is among the rarest of gifts.
The first
virtue a reader finds in prose is clarity, which is not the same as
Dick-and-Jane simplicity. It means no muddle, no ambiguity where none is
intended. The writer knows what he wishes to say and says it without fumbling. One
recalls Jonathan Swift’s diktat in “A Letter to a Young Clergyman” (1720): “Proper
words in proper places, make the true definition of a style,” but adds:
“Professors
in most arts and sciences are generally the worst qualified to explain their
meanings to those who are not of their tribe: a common farmer shall make you
understand in three words, that his foot is out of joint, or his collar-bone
broken, wherein a surgeon, after a hundred terms of art, if you are not a
scholar, shall leave you to seek. It is frequently the same case in law,
physic, and even many of the meaner arts.”
There’s no
all-purpose template for prose, whether workmanlike or excellent. One thinks of Edward Gibbon, William Hazlitt, Abraham Lincoln, Charles Darwin and The New
Yorker’s Joseph Mitchell, all masters of their craft, none of whom could be
mistaken for the others. My friend Douglas Dalrymple, proprietor of the Loose
Canon blog, recently wrote of his namesake, Theodore Dalrymple:
“Not only is
his adopted surname my actual surname, and his natural conservatism cousin to
my own – and not only is he worth admiring as perhaps the greatest living
writer of English prose – but the man loves dogs.”
That too is
good prose. The author of the passage at the top is the poet-critic David Yezzi,
writing of another in his essay “The Seriousness of Yvor Winters.” It’s easy to
quibble with Winters’ more eccentric judgments, some of which may have been issued
as provocations, always a useful device in upsetting unexamined critical
assumptions. Winters’ prose, like his poems, is masterful – forthright and
plainspoken. In reference to “the greatest poems of the plain style,” Yezzi
writes of Winters and his final book, Forms
of Discovery (1967):
“Such poems,
for Winters, are good because they display themes ‘broad, simple, and obvious,
even tending toward the proverbial, but usually a theme of some importance; a feeling
restrained to the minimum required by the subject; a rhetoric restrained to a
similar minimum’ as opposed to the Petrarchan use of ‘rhetoric for its own
sake.’ The argument of the poem is painstakingly logical and precise. The
rhythm is restrained in its careful adherence to the metrical norm, a heavily
stopped line, and a strong caesura.”
So much in one piece. Thank you again for good food for thought and for further exploration, delivered in good prose.
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