I didn't even say metrics were easier to memorize, I said poetry with a memorable voice and vivid language was memorable, but that rhymed meter was even more memorable. I never said "all free verse is bad", where did you get that from? You are putting words in my mouth.
Donne had a very poetic language though, which is why his poems are memorable to me. Anyway, jerking meter around is still meter, it is just abrupt sounding.Donne is hardly, also, a poet who should be held up for metric perfection; he was well known for jerking his metre around, and throwing out random trochaic patterns. Take his "Song" which starts "Go and Catch a falling Star" as example. The poem blends Trochees and Iambs into an inconsistent pattern.
You're trying to brush my criticism off. Though I've read plenty contemporary poetry, some of the poets stlukesguild has posted. Heaney and Wilbur were my favorite of them but I still don't much like them. The most "modern" of the poets I actually like are Auden and Frost. I'm not randomly making a thread about how bad modern poetry is without even having read it. I've read modern poetry, and I dislike it. Why can't you take that at face value? Its almost as if someone is insulting your religion and you are insinuating they don't understand it. We all have access to the same content.Have you ever scanned free verse? have you ever read contemporary poetry? Tell me some of the poets and poems you have read, and maybe I will be able to understand your association with contemporary and bad. As it is, you seem like someone who talks without knowing.
I'm well aware of Bishops meticulous nature, and her poetry is alright, but not good, and no where near ideal.You would also note, that poets like Elizabeth Bishop are far more metrically perfect than almost any example you can really bring up. Every word of every line in Bishop's published poems was carefully chosen for both meaning and sound, sometimes taking her months of revision for one poem.
They are a pretty small group, correct? Anyway, I acknowledged that in the post you quoted. I'll repeat myself:On topic more however, you still haven't acknowledged the poets writing today who use metre and closed form. What do you have to say to them? From what I have read, the New Formalism school, which seemed to hold your views on poetry, died out because they realized it was boring.
"When you use free verse as it is used today or even meters with too simple a language, it isn't really poetic anymore imo."
I'll expand on that. When people use meters today, and use modern speech, it doesn't sound right. There is no poetic language anymore. And then you have the convoluted language of modern free verse which relies on imagery, abruptness, strange grammar, etc, to feel poetic and mysterious because it has lost that former language. This is why modern poetry seems bland and tasteless to me. In fact it sounds a lot like babbling. I liken the decline of poetry with the decline of language. The root of poetry and all literature is in language, and any historian of English or any linguist will tell you, or even a discerning reader, English is declining and becoming simpler. It could be because of its widespread use in the world, or because of mass media, who knows? But the result is the same.
Popular poetry, as in popular to people who read poetry is what I meant.And just so you note, poetry has never been a "popular genre". Lord Byron and perhaps Tennyson are the best examples of "popular poetry", yet how many people read Emily Dickinson in her life time - trick question, the answer is less than 20, and none of them more than a handful of her poems.



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