The American philosopher Brand Blanshard delivered the Riecker Memorial Lecture at the University of Arizona in 1962. It was published that year as a twenty-three-page pamphlet titled “On Sanity in Thought and Art.” For much of the text Blanshard reviews various twentieth-century fashions in philosophy, including logical positivism and existentialism. The essay gets more interesting when he turns to the arts, especially poetry:
“Now the
trouble with contemporary poetry is that its super-ego has gone AWOL. This has
left its practitioners without an ear, and therefore without much music in
their souls. Many present-day poems, if printed continuously rather than in
lines, would give the impression of being peculiarly cacophonous prose.”
A thoughtful
reader nods his head in agreement. In 1962, confessional verse was thriving, as
were such tribes as Beat, Deep Image, Black Mountain, et al. Free verse reigned and poetry was placed on life supports. Blanshard
cites the work of the English poet John Betjeman, who has never successfully crossed the
Atlantic. He is, Blanshard writes, “no great poet” but “he must have something
that the public is hungry for,” at least in England. He continues:
“Robert
Frost has written some things that sing; Masefield has written more; but these
are survivors of an earlier day. The last poet I can think of whose work was
uniformly the product of a fastidious ear was Housman himself, who died in
1936.”
The lament
is familiar: recent decades have been a sad time for poetry and its readers. “Poetry,
no more than art or theology,” Blanshard writes, “can surrender itself to
meaninglessness without capitulating at the same time to charlatans.”
Naturally, I thought of Joseph Epstein’s much admired and hated essay, "Who Killed Poetry?", published in Commentary twenty-three years after Blanshard’s lecture. It concludes: “One gets a darting glint of it [Wallace Stevens’ ‘a pheasant disappearing in the brush’] every once in a while in the work of the better contemporary poets, but to pretend that that meaty and delectable bird freely walks the land isn’t going to get him out of hiding, not soon, and maybe not ever.” I thought of the usual suspects, including poetry workshops, diminished literacy and the erosion of tradition. Most poets are reflexively followers of the herd, and prosy free verse ranks among Orwell's “smelly little orthodoxies.”
Edward Short
has published “Joseph Epstein, Yet Again,” a celebration of the essayist and
critic in City Journal:
“Instead of
joining his contemporaries in touting the fashionably vapid, Epstein has always
remained true to the voices of the great writers whose books turned him into
the discriminating reader we encounter so frequently in his literary criticism.
It also enabled him to see the ruinous effect that the academy has had on the
writing of poetry. In [‘Who Killed Poetry?’], he nailed what continues to make
our contemporary poetry, with few exceptions, so unreadably bad.”
Reminds me of Nick Tosches' Jack-the Ripperesque evisceration of Ramond Carver's "poetry" (Tosches would have insisted on the quotes), "Please Be Quiet - Please":
ReplyDelete"Poetry demands a greater technical proficiency than prose. Rather than being merely the funny-looking arrangement of lines on a page by which most recognize it, poetry - the real thing - cannot be made without a good working knowledge of rhythm, the colors of words, and, especially - when they are to be forsaken - the metrics of the ages of which a poem is merely an echo. One cannot make a new meter without being steeped in the old."
And later, the kill shot:
"To regard this stuff as poetry is to buy into and further the lie that poetry is the desiccated and self-absorbed preciosity that today commonly bears its name. This book is, for the most part, nothing more than some mediocre, boring shit written by a guy too boring to be bad. (Don't worry, this can't hurt his feelings, he's dead.)"