Dear Fellow Word Weavers,
(As I've already mentioned recently) at age 86, with approximately 20 years since publication of my last full volume of poetry (as distinct from chapbooks and collaborations) – Secret Leopard: New & Selected Poems 1974–2005, which is now only available as an ebook – I thought it was time to look through my blogged poems from 2006 onwards, to assemble either a new great big book or several chapbooks on different themes.
I’ve started labelling the poems by themes, as well as marking
them with a tick, cross or question mark.
I began with the earliest, written in 2006 (on my old blog, 'The Passionate Crone') – and was soon blown away by their stunning mediocrity! What’s worse than writing a really bad poem? Writing a mediocre one. (Of course mediocre is a form of ‘bad,’ but a form that is not even interestingly atrocious.) I do hope I’ll see some improvement in my later writings, but at this stage I can’t be sure.
Perhaps it is partly to do with writing to prompts and/or churning things out daily for particular projects such as the April poetry month, plus not going back to revise – or not back far enough, anyway. (Revising too soon can mean I still miss things, not having gained sufficient objectivity yet.)
It all made me remember a Poets Union event in Melbourne years ago, when a panel of poets onstage discussed a question, the exact wording of which I've long forgotten, but it was along the lines of, ‘What’s the essential ingredient for good poetry?’ They were all pontificating solemnly and boringly, and arriving at no conclusion, then Adelaide poet Jenny Boult (later known as MLL Bliss) put up her hand from the audience, and yelled out in her characteristically smoky voice, ‘Deeply felt, for God’s sake – deeply felt!’ She brought the discussion to a sudden halt, as we all instantly recognised the truth of what she said.
Sure enough, my few pieces so far that seem worth putting into a book were written from deep feeling.
Another recollection is of my late friend Ridge, who was not a poet but a clairvoyant, getting a message for me from his guides (or maybe from mine): ‘Let the poems come to you; don’t you chase the poems.’ I didn’t altogether follow this advice, of course, which is one reason for now thinking belatedly that maybe writing to prompts was not my best idea.
Ah but, we all need to practise the craft, don’t we, and what better time than when we’re between our great inspirations? And sometimes – bonus! – what was intended as a mere exercise turns out to be a poem worth sharing with the world. So I’m not going to repine at this late stage.
I also have to take responsibility for the fact that I have often quite deliberately cultivated a low-key, conversational tone – which, I see now, can perhaps slip too readily into the mundane. Which is not a matter of feeling so much as style.
However, to write from deep feeling seems to take care of style.
Your optional prompt this week, then, is to write on something about which you feel deeply.
Reminder: Remember, you are always free to ignore or even subvert the prompt. Or you might choose to write about deep feelings instead of – or as well as – with them.
Guidelines: One post per person, 369 words max (excluding title and any notes), on prompt or off, old or new, verse or prose. Please enjoy reading and commenting on what others share; and chat to us in the comments below if you wish or need. (Also, take a quick glance at those comments below; some may be meant for you personally, not only for the admin team.)
Next week: We will invite you to find inspiration in one of the following quotes:
1. “Although I was born in April, I’m quite certain I was not fully awake until October.” ~ Peggy Toney Horton
2. “It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen.” ~ George Orwell
3. “April is the kindest month. April gets you out of your head and out working in the garden.” ~ Marty Rubin
4. “It is spring again. The earth is like a child that knows poems by heart.” ~ Rainer Maria Rilke
5. “April is the cruelest month, breeding lilacs out of the dead land, mixing memory and desire, stirring dull root with spring rain.” ~ T. S. Eliot


Dear Rosemary, though you have several months on me ... I also find myself traveling back to 2009 and my first Blog poems. Kind of amazed that I seem to be "all over the place" [maybe calling it eclectic is kinder] with no real style as to form, feeling, response to challenges. I have published at least fifteen books, none of them huge, for friends and family over the years. Maybe it's time to take a good look, fill my last book with the poems I have loved best ... composing/reading/sharing. You are such an inspiration, please know how much I appreciate your talent ~~ YOU.
ReplyDeletePS, I have revised and / or deleted quite a few of them. No regrets.
DeleteThanks for those kind words, my dear! I think it's great that in these times we can be part of the wide poetic community online, and have a safe space to share and enjoy each other's work without the discouraging kind of criticism. I am sure that getting to know particular voices well enables us to appreciate them more deeply.
DeleteI just did that on Substack...sat down to write about the first butterfly of the season, and the poem came out as a sad reflection on a murder case. (The first butterfly in the not-a-lawn was probably not Iryna's Azure, anyway. It probably looked like one because it had survived colder than usual weather.)
ReplyDeleteDoes anyone really want me to go all emo twice in one week?
LOL to your last remark. Fortunately its not compulsory.
DeleteI so admire you, Rosemary. I have gone back to when I first started blogging
ReplyDeletein 2009 for Poetics Aside. It would be difficult to even sort them into categories. Some, I am surprised I wrote. Others make me cringe.
I have designed many greeting cards, and calendars for friends,
but I would love to complete a book of my poems.
I would love to read it!
DeletePS Maybe a whole book on one theme might be boring anyway. You could perhaps find some other way to do it? I know some poets put out a chapbook a year, choosing what they like best from each year. It works very well!
DeleteYes, I think my better poems were written “deeply felt”, and i wasn’t even aware of it. The style takes care of itself, depending on the grief, joy, anger, the connection to a place or time, at that moment. I am glad I took my first steps into online poetry in 2005, wading into unknown territory. Otherwise, I would not have met with great communities like you all.
Delete- dsnake1
I'm glad too. I would have been poorer without knowing your excellent and always moving poetry
DeleteHeartiest Congratulations, Rosemary! So happy for you!
ReplyDeleteWonderful work. Thank you for hosting :)
Oh, thank you, Anita!
Delete