Blank Verse Kicks Ass
#1
Read this shit, out loud if possible. I was reading some older blank verse and I got frustrated by the archaic language which bored me but this was a contemporary usage of the form.


Special Treatments Ward
By Dana Gioia


I


So this is where the children come to die,

hidden on the hospital’s highest floor.

They wear their bandages like uniforms

and pull their iv rigs along the hall

with slow and careful steps. Or bald and pale,

they lie in bright pajamas on their beds,

watching another world on a screen.


The mothers spend their nights inside the ward,

sleeping on chairs that fold out into beds,

too small to lie in comfort. Soon they slip

beside their children, as if they might mesh

those small bruised bodies back into their flesh.

Instinctively they feel that love so strong

protects a child. Each morning proves them wrong.


No one chooses to be here. We play the parts

that we are given—horrible as they are.

We try to play them well, whatever that means.

We need to talk, though talking breaks our hearts.

The doctors come and go like oracles,

their manner cool, omniscient, and oblique.

There is a word that no one ever speaks.



II




I put this poem aside twelve years ago

because I could not bear remembering

the faces it evoked, and every line

seemed—still seems—so inadequate and grim.


What right had I, whose son had walked away,

to speak for those who died? And I’ll admit

I wanted to forget. I’d lost one child

and couldn’t bear to watch another die.


Not just the silent boy who shared our room,

but even the bird-thin figures dimly glimpsed

shuffling deliberately, disjointedly

like ancient soldiers after a parade.


Whatever strength the task required I lacked.

No well-stitched words could suture shut these wounds.

And so I stopped...

But there are poems we do not choose to write.



III




The children visit me, not just in dream,

appearing suddenly, silently—

insistent, unprovoked, unwelcome.


They’ve taken off their milky bandages

to show the raw, red lesions they still bear.

Risen they are healed but not made whole.


A few I recognize, untouched by years.

I cannot name them—their faces pale and gray

like ashes fallen from a distant fire.


What use am I to them, almost a stranger?

I cannot wake them from their satin beds.

Why do they seek me? They never speak.


And vagrant sorrow cannot bless the dead.
Reply
#2
and you're opinion is.....

in general it feels forced in a lot of places.

words used in order to make the meter without thought of what it says.
Reply
#3
(06-25-2013, 10:15 AM)billy Wrote:  and you're opinion is.....

in general it feels forced in a lot of places.

words used in order to make the meter without thought of what it says.

I posted a piece of blank verse here once. http://pigpenpoetry.com/showthread.php?tid=10619 In general, it is rare that I write it though, as I tend to pair meter with form, but if you ever read anything I write in "free" verse, I always sprinkle some blank verse in .
Reply
#4
(06-25-2013, 10:41 AM)milo Wrote:  
(06-25-2013, 10:15 AM)billy Wrote:  and you're opinion is.....

in general it feels forced in a lot of places.

words used in order to make the meter without thought of what it says.

I posted a piece of blank verse here once. http://pigpenpoetry.com/showthread.php?tid=10619 In general, it is rare that I write it though, as I tend to pair meter with form, but if you ever read anything I write in "free" verse, I always sprinkle some blank verse in .

When did you add that audio? That shit was pretty good.
Reply
#5
I often use Dana Gioia's essay "Thirteen Ways to Think About The Poetic Line" in class. He's a good analyst and he does have some excellent tips. His poetry -- well, it's hit and miss, like all poets really. He does know what he's on about, which is nice.
It could be worse
Reply
#6
(06-25-2013, 10:41 AM)milo Wrote:  
(06-25-2013, 10:15 AM)billy Wrote:  and you're opinion is.....

in general it feels forced in a lot of places.

words used in order to make the meter without thought of what it says.
I posted a piece of blank verse here once. http://pigpenpoetry.com/showthread.php?tid=10619 In general, it is rare that I write it though, as I tend to pair meter with form, but if you ever read anything I write in "free" verse, I always sprinkle some blank verse in .
when i say in general i was talking about the piece that was posted by the OP sorry, i should have been clearer
Reply
#7
(06-25-2013, 01:13 PM)billy Wrote:  
(06-25-2013, 10:41 AM)milo Wrote:  
(06-25-2013, 10:15 AM)billy Wrote:  and you're opinion is.....

in general it feels forced in a lot of places.

words used in order to make the meter without thought of what it says.

I posted a piece of blank verse here once. http://pigpenpoetry.com/showthread.php?tid=10619 In general, it is rare that I write it though, as I tend to pair meter with form, but if you ever read anything I write in "free" verse, I always sprinkle some blank verse in .
when i say in general i was talking about the piece that was posted by the OP sorry, i should have been clearer

yah, I knew that. I meant to put a period after the link. Looks like you and I suffer from the same disease that causes us to preface statements with "in general"
Reply




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!