[190] Young Poets
Write as you will
In whatever style you like
Too much blood has run under the bridge
To go on believing
That only one road is right.
In poetry everything is permitted.
With only this condition of course,
You have to improve the blank page.
-- Nicanor Parra
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(trans. by Miller Williams)
Today's poem - or, rather, antipoem[1] - is surely the final word on the
'prescriptive poetry' front. I don't think I need say very much about it,
except that the last line is a beautifully and slyly unexpected conclusion,
with which I agree wholeheartedly.
A quick note on form - I've gone into the difference between free verse and
unstrutured verse before (see, for example the comments at poem #54),
but the antipoem is by its very nature unstructured - the form here is a
deliberate formlessness that, while not my favourite poetic style, can be
refreshingly original if done well.
[1] The biography describes the concept nicely, so I won't repeat it here.
Biographical Note:
Parra, Nicanor
b. Sept. 5, 1914, San Fabian, Chile
one of the most important Latin-American poets of his time, the originator
of so-called antipoetry (poetry that opposes traditional poetic techniques
or styles).
Parra studied mathematics and physics at the University of Chile in
Santiago, at Brown University, Providence, R.I., U.S. (1943-45), and at
the University of Oxford. From 1952 he taught theoretical physics at the
University of Chile.
Although Parra later renounced his first book of poetry, Cancionero sin
nombre (1937; "Songbook Without a Name"), his use of colloquial, often
irreverent language, the light treatment of classical forms, and his
humorous tone in that volume presage his later antipoetry.
With Poemas y antipoemas (1954; Poems and Antipoems), Parra's attempts at
making poetry more accessible to the masses gained him national and
international fame. These verses treat common, everyday problems of a
grotesque and often absurd world in clear, direct language and with black
humour and ironic vision.
After experimenting with the local speech and humour of the Chilean lower
classes in La cueca larga (1958; "The Long Cueca [Dance]"), Parra
published Versos de salón (1962; "Verses of the Salon"), which continued
the antipoetic techniques of his earlier works. Obra gruesa (1969; "Big
Work") is a collection of Parra's poems, excluding his first book. Its
tone of dissatisfaction is intensified by the use of prosaic language,
cliché, and ironic wordplay.
In 1967 Parra began to write experimental short poems that he later
published as a collection of postcards entitled Artefactos (1972;
"Artifacts"). In these he attempted to reduce language to its simplest
form without destroying its social and philosophical impact. Later
collections include Sermones y prédicas del Cristo de Elqui (1977; Sermons
and Homilies of the Christ of Elqui) and Hojas de Parra (1985; "Leaves
[Pages] of Parra").
-- EB
And finally, a bonus poem that delivers a rather trenchant comment on
antipoetry:
Antipoetry
Like Nicanor Parra I write antipoetry
antipoems for antipeople in antibooks
antipoems for anticritics for antireaders
antipoetry for antiassholes in the antimatter
antielectrons in the antiatoms for antideaf
in my antiadaptation to the literary world
in the antigroup of the antiliterature
antipoetry for antieditors for antiprizes
for antilectors for anticorrectors for antipublishers
and it is not because I don't like poetry or
because I don't like critics, it is because,
like any other antipoet I only know
how to write
antipoetry.
-- Moshe Benarroch
m.