I now stand accused of committing poetry.
The accusation is made by someone who identifies herself only as the
Language Meter Maid. Instead of handing out parking tickets, she prowls the
prosaic world looking for inadvertent poems. It must be like searching for
sprigs of grass in the cracks of the sidewalk.
The lady stays on the look-out for found poems - writing not meant to be
poetry but that is perceived as such by a reader. She claims to have found
such a poem in a column of mine. It seems to have sprung up in a reply to
someone who said I needed to decide whether I was writing a political or a
literary column. The Language Meter Maid rearranged my response and - Voila!
- a poem:
Do I have to stay obsessed
with politics all the time?
Could I not come out of my closet?
At night?
Like a vampire,
to delight in the taste and treasure
of the wine-red English tongue?
Modesty should forbid, but here is Language Meter Maid's assessment of the
poem she found tucked away in my prose:
"The lack of pretension found in the plain language, the brilliant adjective
Œwine-red,' which shines even brighter due to the lack of other adjectives
in the poem, and the use of Œtongue' instead of Œlanguage' makes this a
marvelous poem."
Goodness. I think I'm in love. Forget about the way to a man's heart being
through his stomach; that's a slow and arduous route compared to flattery.
Just lather it on, ladies, and we're yours. (But you already knew that,
didn't you?) Talk about the weaker sex - the male of the species has an ego
so vast yet so fragile that it requires constant reinforcement.
Nobody need ever know that I, uh, adapted the adjective which so excited the
Meter Maid's admiration (wine-red) from a blind old Greek. Please don't call
it plagiarism; I prefer to think of it as a literary allusion.
Years ago I had a publisher who was also an editor - E.W. Freeman III of the
Pine Bluff Commercial down in the Arkansas Delta. One of the inky wretches
he employed for a time, the legendary Patrick J. Owens out of Hungry Horse,
Montana, wrote of Ed Freeman that he was "interested in the way a word can
sing, in how high a fact can bounce."
It was Ed who brought to my attention a line from an article in Max Ascoli's
old Reporter magazine - a fine journal some of us still miss. I remember
neither the name nor author of the article, or even its prosaic political
subject, but one phrase was perfect poetry:
The simple sharkskin splendor
of a Beirut business suit.
Talk about a poetic line. I've borrowed it, too, from time to needy time.
A close reading of even political documents can yield a bountiful harvest of
found poems, especially if they're speeches and meant to be spoken. See
Lincoln's stirring Gettysburg Address:
Fourscore and seven years ago
our fathers brought forth on this continent,
a new nation,
conceived in Liberty,
and dedicated to the proposition
that all men are created equal.
Or the same president's sublime Second Inaugural:
With malice toward none;
Continued... |