[New-Poetry] Collins on clarity
Bob Grumman
bobgrumman at nut-n-but.net
Wed Sep 12 20:56:42 EDT 2007
One thing I find interesting about Collins's remarks on clarity is his
assumption that a poem is a message. That the poems of Wilshberia are
almost never anything more than messages is a major problem with them
for me.
Another reaction of mine to what David quoted: I know and admire poems
(some of Roethke's, for instance) that start in or near incoherence and
gradually clarify, which is the opposite of what Collins favors. Much
music that I like does the same--starts as noise or close to it but
eventually achieves a standard resolution. Not that I'm against what
Collins favors. Or jittering back and forth in a poem. The placement
of clarities and their opposites in a poem is surely something to be
decided on a case by case basis.
Another thought: Collins is talking about what I'd call psychological
risk; he seems not to realize that there's such a thing as aesthetic
risk (which, yeah, is no doubt in some final sense a psychologica risk,
but very different from what Collins is talking about). My Poem poems
seem to me pretty clear (and sometimes intimate), but unrisky. My
mathematical poems seem a great risk to me, usually. For instance, will
my graphic images come across as crude to a "real" painter? Are the
phrases I use that are intended to be gripping images banal and/or
sentimental and/or pretentious? Or incoherent. I, for one, fear being
considered incoherent, and fear more actually being incoherent and not
able to recognize it. I also fear being too simple..
Interesting topic.
--Bob
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