David Green

David Green (Books) is the imprint under which I published booklets of my own poems. The original allocation of ISBN numbers is used up now, though. The 'Collected Poems' are now available as a pdf. The website is now what it has become, often more about music than books and not so often about poems. It will be about whatever suggests itself.

Tuesday, 20 August 2013

The Avoidance of Bad Practice

Poetry and poetry critics have an ambivalent relationship with the idea of orthodoxy. While many readily dispense rules, guidelines, dictums, manifestos and agendas towards what they think poetry is or should be, no sooner are these in place than it becomes de rigeur to transgress them. The rules were apparently for others to studiously comply with while the real poet is the individual whose talent gives them the right to break them.

Reviewers allocate much of their time identifying how the poet under discussion establishes their own unique identity, their ‘voice’ and often how they create the striking effects in their poems. It is about 100 years since Pound advised that poetry should ‘make it new’ and textbooks devote themselves to explaining how it is desirable to shock and surprise, to see the world in a new way, remake cliché or set up an expectation only to subvert it. All of that is, on the face of it, fair enough but it isn’t long before that becomes a new orthodoxy.

How many shocks and surprises can one take before one becomes attuned to them, before the unexpected becomes predictable, before the shock of the newness becomes cursory and mundane. After a long hour of reading poetry, one would have become immune to such arcane fireworks. A novelty doesn’t remain so for very long and the idea of novelty has a similar limit to its uses. By all means, without stylistic innovation there would be no progress and no interest whatsoever in any new writing but poets whose whole manifesto is based on their perceived ground-breaking style are likely to be of brief interest to all but their immediate circle of supporters. Even something as clever as the ‘Martian’ poetry of the 1980’s began to seem old hat very quickly which is not to say it isn’t worth reading any more, only that nobody seemed to be writing like that by the mid 1990’s.

One simple maxim that does endure, though, is the avoidance of bad practice, that is - bad stylistic practice. The shifting element within that, of course, is what is regarded as bad practice from one decade, or less than that, to the next. But the poems I find I most admire, having read a few books in recent few years and made mention of them here, are those that do the fewest things wrong and yet still remain memorable.

There are a number of readily identifiable traits that recur in poetry that can make potentially good ones not quite so good- for example, too much alliteration, gestures that are too grand, straining for effect and modish affectation. In Donald Davie’s phrase, a poem is ‘a considered utterance’ and so is not really a poem at all unless self-consciously artificial. And so it is a sort of non-sequitur for a poem like Allen Ginsberg’s Howl to affect to be a spontaneous outpouring of an over-wrought sensibility when in fact he worked very hard on it to make it appear so.  But, each poem succeeds or fails on its own terms and is only successful when a reader has enjoyed it (even if the only reader that does so is its author), and so each to their own and Ginsberg’s admirers are welcome to him.

Philip Larkin’s method is a case in point in the avoidance of bad practice, having become a ‘plain style’ that eschewed such recently bygone aberrations as Eliot’s high intellectualism, Auden’s political engagement and Dylan Thomas’s wordy apocalyptic rhetoric. Larkin’s approach had a cleansing effect, for those inclined to follow it, but in turn he was immediately indicted by the next shift in fashion which saw him as genteel, workmanlike and unambitious.

The first thing any poem needs to do is ‘be any good’ but there is more than one way to skin a cat, as they say, and there is no need to have a set of rules, of do’s and don’ts, and no manifesto to indicate how that might be achieved. The ongoing dialectic between the establishment of new principles and their immediate rebuttal is as useful as fashion. Adherence to such agendas makes poems more easily dated. Personally, ‘making it new’, achieving an individual ‘voice’ and seeing the world in a new way are perfectly laudable things to have found one has done but one hasn’t automatically failed if those targets haven’t been achieved.