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Speccie Competition Buttoned Up or Open Neck
It is pleasing to find that the last time this competition ran, quite a lot of people were open neck. This time they weren't. and I should think so too. Bill did it though. And Bazza also starred.
Lucy Vickery 19 October 2013 In Competition 2819 you were invited to write a poem either in free verse mocking rhymed, metrical verse or in conventional verse mocking free verse. Auden was no fan of vers libre: ‘If one plays a game, one needs rules, otherwise there is no fun.’ (D.H. Lawrence, he felt, was one of the few poets who could pull free verse off.) But there are those who question the designation ‘free’. The poet and critic Yvor Winters maintained that ‘the free verse that is really verse, the best, that is, of …Marianne Moore, Wallace Stevens, and Ezra Pound is the antithesis of free.’ And T.S. Eliot agreed with him. Last time this comp was run, the jury was split. This time round most of you came down on Auden’s side. The winners take £25 each; Alan Millard nabs £30. Pace you who, scorning rules and reason, Write rambling lines which neither scan nor rhyme. Your scripts I scorn as literary treason, Your verse I curse as pure, poetic crime. You lack the pomp of Pope, the charm of Chaucer, The marching rhythm of iambic feet, In literature could anything be coarser Than wild, meandering verse without a beat? I justly would deserve the world’s rejection If, disregarding measured, metric rules, I ruined this, a poem of perfection, With formless freedom only fit for fools By writing, for example, a little line Followed by a ludicrously long one that nobody understands! Oh no! Free verse I shun with all my heart And with this closing couplet prove my art. Alan Millard — absent-minded like martinets (who don’t think of anything but action), they’re on a dawn patrol with a fez and a fly-whisk, hunting down layabout poems that missed the roll call because they were strolling into experiment, somewhere unexpected: they neglect their language, drive it out of pens into an abattoir of form — next poem (stunned), next poem (stunned), as the carcasses move overhead to be drawn and quartered into verses, to be learned lines as in detention, as in regiment, as in morgue, the cemetery of expression — can’t hear the echo, the repetitions, the whole breathlessness of breath. Bill Greenwell Out of the blights that visit me, Black on the page to plague my soul, I curse as worst verse labelled free — Yea, free of effort and control They easiest move who’ve learned to dance. Unpractised shufflers aren’t endowed With grace like that. They stand no chance When hard-won skill is disavowed. Beyond the unskilled, rhyme disappears; Planned rhythm, too: tricks of the trade With which true poets charm our ears; Without which, words too swiftly fade. Wimps find the field of play too strait When rules restrict. Their rigmarole Of chopped-up prose does not create The kind of poem that kicks a goal. Ray Kelley Hexameters from Homer led the way, Singing of ancient Ithaca and Troy; In later centuries rhyme came into play, For Chaucer, Pope and Spenser to deploy. The path of metre reached its apogee In stellar works penned by the Bard and Milton; Much later though came some whose verse was ‘free’, Abandoning the ground these two had built on. A US banker (forenames Thomas Stearns) Epitomised this: his so-called chef d’oeuvre, With rhyme and metre least of its concerns, Is rambling, incoherent, lacking verve. Free verse is often just a piece of prose, Scattered around the page, and you may find, If ditching metre is what you propose, Complete disaster — Tay Bridge comes to mind. Roger Theobald ’Zooks! You hidebound convention-cravers, Rhyme’n’rhythm-driven drivellers, Petty prosody purists, easy-peasy cowards, Afeard of fun, adventure-free drones; Yes you, in bard-jacket subfusc, Elbow-patched corduroy, hapless hair aflow Like your cliché claptrap stanzas: Ever dared dismiss those dreary dactyls — Single, double, ptero? So spondee-fondee, You hendecasyllabic helots, trudging the party line; Limericky lackeys, penny-a-liners, score a mighty zilch On the Beaufort scale of heat and hwyl. Ain’t no rumpy-pumpy goin’ Tum-titi-tum-titi down to your graves. Am I right? You bet I Amb! Mike Morrison Your British bard drinks bitter beer. He loves an end-stopped line. He wants to make his meaning clear. He likes iambics fine. But wine-soaked foreigners (or worse) Prefer to mystify. Their work is cloudy and perverse, Their sense of form awry. Take Rimbaud and his loony tunes; Take Whitman, just as daft — Two posturing hot-air balloons. Why can’t they learn their craft? ‘Expressive, vital form’? My bum. Don’t take me for a fool. Just take your damn vers libre, chum, And shove it up your cul. Basil Ransome-Davies |
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