It seems a great shame, or even bad form, to be immediately following up yet another celebration of music with grizzly comment on poetry but I'm always glad when someone far better than a grisly low-voltage ne'er-do well like me finally puts into words what I've been thinking for a long time.
Matthew Stewart at Rogue Strands is to be thanked for highlighting this frank summation of the poetry industry, such as it is, by Rory Waterman from Poetry London,
Rory Waterman in Poetry London.
So it wasn't just me who was thinking such things, then. I can call myself Disenchanted because I have been enchanted by poetry, not all of it but plenty of it, ever since I can remember. That was why I wanted to do it. Like football, cricket, cycling and pop music, one saw something one admired and wanted to have a go at it oneself and so did, with varying degrees of success.
But what Rory diagnoses is what it's like now, increasingly so or maybe it was always thus but one was too enthralled to notice. It's precious, it seems to go unquestioned that the poet, who is self-appointed, is something of importance and must be treated as such. It's possible that nobody is prepared to point out that it's the king's new clothes all over again in case they seem disrespectful or somebody somewhere might decide that their efforts are no good, either.
A sceptic friend once estimated that 90%, I think it was, it might have been 95%, of poetry was 'no good'. And a much-admired, now sadly departed, eminent poet once told me I was a harsh critic. I wasn't entirely surprised by that but consoled myself later with my own reasons.
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