IF YOU CAN’T LICK ‘EM
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As a former English teacher, I was heartened to find that Nick Owchar laments the loss of form and music in yet another collection of free verse trying to pass as poetry: “Truth and Lies That Press for Life” (Dec. 29). To those who prefer being published to writing poetry, I offer the following:
Forget the rhyme,
most editors advise.
Traditional is “out”--
like that brief candle of Macbeth’s.
Blame Ginsberg.
He’s the one that howled down
all future Frosts
(who must play tennis now
Without a net),
axed any would-be Audens
apt at every form,
warned off those wags
who might have walked
with Wilbur’s measured tread,
humiliated every Houseman
hound
who did it the old-fashioned way,
and so
made subtle rhyme seem obvious
as Poe.
But you who loved the magic of
Millay,
the power of Prufrock, and the
beat of a Benet,
need not dismay.
If you will simply shift your sense
and sound
around so they won’t blend and
echo in
the head long after unrhymed
lines are dead,
you’ll not just publish, you’ll be thought profound.
JAMES VAN WAGONER, SANTA BARBARA
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