In spite of his pretence of being a prophet, the Canadian poet Irving Layton is really nothing more than a vociferous narcissist with nothing to say. This contemptible poem sums up his poetic creed and further demonstrates his utter inability to "make things happen" at the formal and stylistic level of expression.
WHOM I WRITE FOR
(text removed at request of Layton estate/publisher)
This is a worthless poem, essentially because it fails to realize what it asserts. The subject is Layton's intense desire to be heard (regardless of what he might have to say) and his claim to communicative potency. The violent imagery is meant to dramatize this idea in order to force the reader feel the poet's power; however, the diction is attenuated by stock phrases, syntactical predictability, and an cowardly absence of imaginative risk-taking. The poem asserts power but expresses resentment and impotence. An authentically forceful or “violent” poem would perhaps need to launch a sort of blitzkrieg on the conventional use of language. Compared to Stevens’s “Poetry is a Destructive Force,” to take just one of many superior examples, Layton’s sarcastic poetic mission statement is no more impressive than the boasting of some adolescent, foulmouth bully. “Whom I Write For,” like most of Layton’s poems, is nothing more than a bluff by a bully of a poet.![]()


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