11-24-2012, 10:45 AM
Well, you can at least, objectively comprehend what I'm on about?
Difference between poetry and prose?
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11-24-2012, 10:45 AM
Well, you can at least, objectively comprehend what I'm on about?
(11-24-2012, 03:59 AM)abu nuwas Wrote: The absurdity of twisting terminology produces all sorts of problems. Poetry, now encompassing anything and everything, has to be qualified when people really mean poetry: and so we have 'traditional poetry'. What if I compose a traditional prose-poem?you would be loved ![]() (11-24-2012, 04:39 AM)Rose Love Wrote: Why do I fall apart when he stays awaywhen you break a line the line inherits something else, specially when done in a certain way. each little snowflake living its brief moment in the light of the street lamp, lingering or hastened through this limelight at the whim of the wind, passing thus away, back into the dark space of night, becoming again invisible, forgotten. you bring the snow flake to life in a way that; each little snowflake living its brief moment in the light of the street lamp, lingering or hastened through this limelight at the whim of the wind, passing thus away, back into the dark space of night, becoming again invisible, forgotten. doesn't a pause or caesura count as a poetic device? , here you bring the flake to life in a way the other version didn't. it's been worked on in such a way as the presentation adds to the thing. here i'd say it's an okay poem. there it was an okay piece of prose. while i don't know what the rules are for me prose poetry exists. the same as pigeon english exists. steak and kidney pie exists. its a mixture of prose and poetry in such a way as to be defined by me as prose poetry. and i think thats okay. i have problem with others not attesting to the existence of prose poetry. exciting stuff eh ![]() (11-24-2012, 09:38 AM)abu nuwas Wrote:i feel so small reading this. i really like 31...and he died(11-24-2012, 08:51 AM)rowens Wrote: What do you think of "Une saison en enfer" by Rimbaud? Or the "verset"?Rowens ![]() hat's off to you abu
11-24-2012, 04:51 PM
I'm inclined to agree with Rose (and therefore Rowens) here, about the purpose or deliberate intent when the piece was originally penned /created.
That, to some extent the author has to have a greater say than the individual "critique" reguardless of whether the item is a good example or follows the rules. Having said that we then get back to the emperor's new clothes syndrome and at some point common consent and common sense should be allowed to weigh in and make the call over if it is a shovel or a spade. sorry hit wrong button this comment is in reply to Rose on P3! You guys carry, on I'll catch up in a mo...turn around for half a day to look at something else and everyone's buggered off without you. ![]()
11-24-2012, 04:59 PM
(11-24-2012, 04:51 PM)cidermaid Wrote: I'm inclined to agree with Rose (and therefore Rowens) here, about the purpose or deliberate intent when the piece was originally penned /created. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() (11-24-2012, 04:51 PM)cidermaid Wrote: I'm inclined to agree with Rose (and therefore Rowens) here, about the purpose or deliberate intent when the piece was originally penned /created.No kidding, on the buggered off without you thing--guys really! A couple quick comments...Psalms, Ecclesiastics, Gospel of John, 1 John, and Revelation to some extent have some good poetic sequences, but I agree the Bible isn't poetry. What the Bible and the works of Shakespeare give you is the key to understanding most English language literary allusions. I guess that would specifically be the King James Bible of 1611. To the author/reader thing: sometimes the reader is full of crap, true. Like if they read Leda and the Swan by Yeats and had no idea what story he was drawing from. The author in this case is more in step with the poem and what is poetry in this case. All that said, author intention on is it poetry means almost nothing to me. It belongs solely to the reader. It only belongs to the writer before the poem is read by others. Each reader decides if something is poetry, and they're right as far as that goes. If a big enough consensus of readers don't think it's poetry, the author may be deluded. The good news is that tastes change and maybe 100 years after their death it will catch on, or it will still be crap--but at that point they probably will have gotten over it.
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
11-24-2012, 09:21 PM
![]() Too true Todd, and also when you say tastes and opinions change. But I'm getting a feeling that we are almost straying into the whole nonsense of copy write legislation on "art" here (which i think is totally arse backwards and i would be in favour of bringing back public flogging to correct). Things like that make me so mad ![]() Sorry I'm having another irrational rattle throwing moment...don't worry I'll get over it soon. Normal service will be resumed soon
11-24-2012, 09:53 PM
Cider,
You are a horse-breeder. If someone who breeds hamsters tells you he is a horse-breeder, you might object. But he then tells you that what you call hamsters, can also be referred to as horses. The naming of things is a basic part of human knowledge and endeavour -- muddling them up is not helpful.
11-24-2012, 10:54 PM
You are a horse-breeder. If someone who breeds hamsters tells you he is a horse-breeder, you might object. But he then tells you that what you call hamsters, can also be referred to as horses. The naming of things is a basic part of human knowledge and endeavour -- muddling them up is not helpful.
[/quote] Hi Abu, I'm having a bit of a blond moment here because I'm not sure I totaly got what your were saying there. I get the whole language / naming thing (I'm enjoying this other thread as well) and I appreciate that my post was straying well of subject..but I had thought that allowing my thoughts to wander down the whole path of; who owns the right to "name" a thing, did perhaps have some relevance to Todd's comment, that a poem only belongs to a reader before it is read. I had wondered how far this went and was it the same as with other copyright issues (as I had experianced then..hence the example). Does it belong with the person who brought all the elements together, (be these food ingredients, animal breed selection or words onto a page), or is it with the current beholder. So whilst i did not feel muddled when I wrote the comment...I was expressing a dislike for a system that allows a picture of my prize horse to be used as an advert, say for dog food or a donkey sanctuary and I have no control over this. I was simply wondering [out loud] if this same situation could be applied to poetry. .... now I am feeling muddled because I can't get a handle on what point you are trying to make...could you give it to me one more time...in blond speak! ![]() ![]() ![]()
11-24-2012, 11:01 PM
"...turn around for half a day to look at something else and everyone's buggered off without you."
They eagerly insisted on user participation. A poet makes a statement of poetry in the sense that a religious person makes a religious statement. Whether in verse, prose, speech, action, belief, or silence. So it's obviously open to failure and disagreement, dislike, or attack. As for copyrighted stuff, I don't care about that. If somebody wants to use something that I did, I can tell them I don't approve of it, but I wouldn't bother making a legal case of it. Splicing a horse with a hamster might be a waste of time. Poetry might be a waste of time too. I have no argument for calling a horse a hamster, but maybe if I saw a lizard riding on a hamster's back, I'd call that hamster a horse for that lizard: making an unspoken correlation between a lizard and the humans' popular use for horses.---But I do have arguments for calling prose, poetry. A chimera is a poetic life form. |
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