A WAKE-UP CALL.........
This is a re-print of an article that I wrote in June last year. I would like to open discussion on poetry today, using our site as the forum, as I think we need to breathe some more life and a lot more passion into our child of the soul (AucklandPoetry.com).
What are YOUR views? Please add comments to this post or send your thoughts on this subject to our Editor
POETRY - A DECLINING ART?
One of the reasons for the decline in the popularity of poetry today may be the prevalence of writing in freer forms of the art.
No more rigid structure of line and verse, no rhyming couplets and quatrains.
Odes, sonnets and ballads no longer seem to have expected forms.
The very texture of the thoughts behind the words has apparently become the poems in some of these new evolutions and such forms of expressive language and thought totally lose the general public.
We have all been brought up and educated with “classical” metred and rhymed structures, from pre-school to University ( nursery rhymes to Shakespeare), from television “jingles” to popular music, and anything without the repeating and organised patterns that we’ve all learned to recognise as poetry, will tend to be dismissed as prose, albeit written and laid out in an unfamiliar non-prosaic manner.
Our bodies and lives run to many rhythms from heartbeat to circadian to celestial.
Our songs whether Bach, Handel, Abba or Puff Daddy are rhythmic and their lyrics rhyme, so to my mind it is not surprising that the modern and experimental poets are given short shrift by the general public if their work is not to expected shapes.
Shakespearian Iambic Pentametre, for example, is a copy of the rhythm of the human heartbeat. John Masefield’s use of rhythm and rhyme in poems such as “Cargoes” enhances the word pictures of the various vessels in the poem.
One could define classic poetry as a “song without music” which suggests the requirement of recurrent themes of sound and structure. Take these rhythms away and the free-flowing shape of modern poetic writing is rejected by the majority of our peers as directionless, shapeless and untenable (the Universe is full of finite and recognisable shapes and thus shall be our poetry).
Today’s poetry scene has become asymmetrically bi-polar.
On the one hand a small group of modern poets and supporters with their new definitions of poetry, and on the other hand a massive public which is still being fed and educated with rhyme and rhythm, and whose expectation is more of the same.
Modern poetry, if thought about at all, is being perceived by ordinary folk as an exclusive domain for the erudite few, a past-time for unkempt and bearded introverts, or in its worst form, absolute rubbish. We all know where the money is, and so professional promotion also supports the expectations of the greater public.
What is most ironic is that the classical poet is not always recognised now by his modern peers and thus is denied their encouragement and support, which, in turn, denies the paying public the poetry they expect.
Poetry to the man in the street has now become a dying and irrelevant art form restricted to dusty halls of learning and old libraries.
Renaissance for the art form rests, in my opinion, with the classical styles the greater public expects. A collection of contemporary classical poetry could contain a few introductory modern poems as a means of educating the public to the newer forms of poetry, and so everyone would benefit from this inclusive, non-partisan approach.
My oldest son, when he was just thirteen, told me that he was discouraged by his English teacher from writing in rhyme that year, as he and his peers had not developed sufficient language skills in her opinion. How will he and others develop those skills and disciplines without encouragement at an earlier age by their teachers?
Free form styles rule in school!
So, as very few people in educational institutions appear today to be promoting the necessary English language skills and dedicated craftsmanship needed for production of classical poetry styles, the situation for poetry in general is going to continue to deteriorate.
For those of you who say, “But look at the recent increase in the numbers of our poets,” I will say, “But look at the even greater increase in our general population!” The ironic twist mentioned above will continue screwing contemporary poetry as a whole into the ground whilst the craft and skills of classical poetry writing are being allowed to dissipate.
© Kim Randell 2006

6 comments:
I agree & said much the same in my poem
"What's Poetry" [C] 2007
One should review and never eschew,
The genre of poems that please,
Blank verse you may curse, or even worse,
Vers libre, gets you down, on your knees !
But 'Joy to the Soul', is the ultimate goal,
There's no need for any dilemma,
But perhaps one should know, in the eyes of John Doe
Si metrum non habet -- non est poema ! !
The main site is intended for poems and the site policy is to allow many voices. But am totally happy to discuss this.
The site policy is to accept stuff that one of the two editor specialists may accept and encourage contribution. One should of course feel free to extend a POV. I will put up a BBS for you.
Mainly I want good poets to contribute their voice, and if they are all classical or modernist poets - that's totally fine with me, as long as they put their stamp on it.
It is the nature of a public contribution site to be variant.
And there are only so many of us that can effectively use rhyme.
But I would like to say that I would encourage more classic verse contributions - and that I would not stop the site going off in that general direction, if you want to choose and post, encourage classical poets to post, etc.
But I can't see me writing like that, firinst'ce.
It's an interesting idea - on the one hand the popularity of people like Penny Ashton supports Kim Randell's point.
On the other hand I would argue that the top selling working poet in NZ by far at the moment is Glenn Colhoun and his forms have a much wider range - and the "general public" clearly appreciates that.
More importantly, he has something interesting to say, and he says it. THAT is what people want.
A well wisher
Could Glenn Colquhoun's success be more related to his subject matter than his poetic style ? and does he really appeal to the ''general public'' who have long since given up modern 'poetry' ?
Before this matter closes, can we add that people who can write astute well constructed rhymes in classical forms are rare, just as good songwriters are rare.
Of course it is an art that deserves the public attention. It's not easy to do and very few do it well.
I enjoy Bernie's work as it always leaves a smile... so, how does one learn to write like that?
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