The Poetry Book Society - Top Tips for New Poetry Readers from Simon Armitage


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The Poetry Book’s Society - Top Tips from Simon Armitage
I found this Poetry Testing Kit, intriguing and oddly just-right. It says in a nutshell what academics go round in circles saying. The questioning format brings the reader right into the conversation – it is inclusive, it does not beat about the bush. I don’t think it belittles poetry either but it brings it out of the dusty annals of poetry masters and into the laps of the people… and what a final question…’Is it possible to write a good poem, if you’ve never read one?’ What do you think? And the tips, read them and see for yourself...I must admit to liking them, how about you?
An Irreverent Guide for New Poetry Readers
The PBS' Top Tips for Poetry Readers by Simon Armitage
Here's a Poetry Testing Kit. It can't produce a precise result in terms of a poem being good or bad - it's more of a finger-in-the-wind, rule-of-thumb job, that might tell you why you like a poem (or why you don't). Remember, the reading of poetry is not an exact science: it does not require the wearing of protective glasses and need not be carried out under strict laboratory conditions.
The Eye Test - How does it look on the page? Has some thought gone into its shape? Does the form bear some resemblance to the content?
The Magic Eye Test - If you look for long enough into the poem, will it reveal another meaning or picture hidden within it? Will further readings uncover further meanings and new rewards, and so on?
The Hearing Test - How does it sound? Read it out loud - does it work on the ear in some way?
The pH Test - A test for Poetic Handicraft. Does the poem use recognizable poetic techniques, of which there are hundreds? Are the techniques subtle, or do they poke out at the edge?
The IQ Test - Not a test for Intelligence Quotient, although that might come into it, but a double test for Imaginative Quality and Inherent Quotability: does the poem have some sort of dream life you can respond to: does it have lines or phrases that might stick in the memory?
The Test of Time - Would the poem outlive its immediate circumstances? This doesn't mean it has to be 'classic' or 'great' or have some eternal message - it might just be a case of the poem withstanding a second reading. Remember, good poems can create their own contexts, and have poetic value way beyond their apparent shelf-life or sell-by date.
The Test of Nerves - Somebody once said that a poem shouldn't just tell you not to play with matches, it should burn your fingers. In other words, does the poem create a sensation, rather than simply an understanding?
The Lie Detector Test - Poems don't have to tell the truth, but they have to be true to themselves, even if they're telling a lie. Give the poem a thump - does it ring true?
The Spelling Test - Does the poem cast a kind of spell or charm? At the very least does it create a world, even just a small but distinct world, capable of sustaining human life; a world whose atmosphere we can breathe and whose landscape we can inhabit for the duration of the poem?
The Acid Test - This is the final test and the one that really counts. It's like a test for the mystery ingredient that separates a truly great tomato sauce from its rivals. It's the X-factor, although it might be to do with the author's experience of poetry. Is it possible to write a good poem if you've never read one? Somehow I doubt it.
4 Comments:
I love this! Thanks!
Yes it is a good list, and I would mostly run poems through this, although not straight after writing them *blush* Nothing stands criticism that soon in.
Word verification: exonbul - think that says it all!
Hey Liz, thanks for the link to REDMUM,haven't read the words yet or seen all the pics but I really like some of her photos so will keep goin back.(funnily enough she got a mention in an article I was reading in Sat's paper too.)As for writin without reading-yeah sure it's poss :)
cheers Nuala, Barbara and TFE.
Barbara, yeah, me too - I more or less weigh up my work with these things in mind - love the titling of the process here though and how it misses no punches...
TFE, I think redmum was near to winning a blog award...pity she didn't...and writing a great poem without reading a great poem ? maybe, but reckon good reading of any description would back up the writing of a good poem too. No hard nor fast rules nor limits, just the urge and need to do it, me reckons. : )
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