Monday 4 January 2021

The silences between poems

It’s my firm belief that poems benefit from silences between them, from so-called fallow periods that actually don’t tend to be fallow at all. Very few poets benefit from writing eight hours a day, as thoughts and ideas need to ferment and macerate. Moreover, poems improve when blended with experiences, both everyday and extraordinary ones, which is a key reason why I believe most people’s poetry deteriorates once they begin teaching Creative Writing in an academic environment without sufficient non-poetic stimuli and points of reference.

Of course, the same goes for drafts. They too require space to breathe. In their case, the space is necessary to allow me to fall out of love with them, to disentangle myself from the heady fumes of their creation and take a surgical step back before working at them again. And then leaving them in a folder for months. Maybe cannibalising them for a different piece. Maybe realising how to turn them from a failure to a success in a sudden spark, sometimes years after their initial creation. That spark, inevitably, comes from an unexpected facet of a new experience that takes me back to the afore-mentioned old piece and also reciprocally enables me to cast a different light on what’s just happened to me. Without life, poetry starves.

2 comments:

  1. Resonates ! I try and record those scraps which arrive unbidden - if I’m lucky , a few fully formed données - use my phone voice recorder if I’m out walking the dog ! Later they may find a home in a poem - or remain incubating !

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, mobiles have made it easier to keep track of notes, haven't they? Far better than countless scraps of paper! On the other hand, I could never write an actual poem on my phone...

      Delete