
Originally Posted by
librarius_qui
The question wasn't about fame. It was about selling: "can a man live of poetry?" ... According to a capitalist view. I agree with you that in the Western world, things aren't, conciously, made to last; however, some things last randomly. We cannot forsee what will last, because a huge amount is produced, and in the big cities (NY, Rio, ...) most everyone "is a poet/writer", and only time will tell which of them will last, independant of merits, in cases (...). As you said, there may be 10 Canadian "poets" (self called, perhaps ...), and one Muslim poet (who might not even consider himself so), and the Muslim is definitely better than all the 10 Canadians together.
This is the main reason I tell people that they should not think about live (=make money/sell) out of their writing. To have a salary, you have to do a constant work, and art isn't necessarily a constant production. Journalism may be (unfortunately ...), but not art. This is my view, of course.
Unless, like some ... poets (?) in Brasil, who actually live like tramps, and don't have great expectations of a common life (i.e. living in a nice place, being well with their families (parents), thinking about settling down, with a wife, have kids ... Things that mortal thingies (like me) think about ...
Live of art is delusion, unless you make it a product. Painting seems to be at the same time easier and more difficult, but poetry? It's complete delusion. Good poetry seldom sells and, when it sells, and the poet tries to make more to keep selling, 99% chance he's been corrupted, and is doing the same thing, and not something actually good as the first, and he's doing it in order to sell, not poetry anylonger, but a name that has achieved a certain value in the market. And fools will buy it. (And it happens more with fictional literature, and very difficultly with poetry. I consider good writing posthumous, poetry even more than that. Unless the "poet" is a jester, in a modern court (...).)
Paruos~