Jerry E. Smith
(A Question Of) DEFINITION
Recently a friend told me
Poetry is a way of
Speaking the unspeakable
Saying the unsayable
Writing the unwritable . . .
Frankly, that's the most unheard of thing, I've ever heard of!
(As Jay Ward's King Leonardo would say).
The ineffable is
By definition
Beyond words --isn't it?
I suppose
One could try
Writing around the unspeakable,
Bracketing it in words,
Defining it by its absence;
But that strikes me as little more than a cheap conjurers trick
More "arty" than "art,"
And besides . . .
It sounds way too much like work.
And I suppose
One could resort to
Simile and metaphor
Like we were taught back in Seminary School (while learning to
petition the Lord with prayer).
But, isn't that just saying the unsayable
In "other" words? (I think Morrison was right)
So, what am I to do?
Study Japanese Haiku in greater depth?
Write poetry too vague to discern a meaning in,
And in so doing
Appear as though I were saying the unsayable
When in fact I'm saying nothing at all?
I will admit it!
I cannot say the unsayable
Write the unwritable
Nor
Sing the lost chord (neither could the Moody Blues);
But
Just sometimes, mind you
I can tell you what I think
And how I feel.
And perhaps, if I dress it up
In best Sunday go to poetry readin' clothing
Then just maybe
You won't notice
That it's not poetry
--By a critics definition.
Come to think of it
He doesn't write poetry,
I guess by his definition
He's the best poet of all.
13 Sep 1996/24 Jul 97
Return to DEFINITION
at http://www.jerryesmith.com/index.php/75.