Defining Poetry
Posted in prose on May 24th, 2011 by JosiahThis message is going to be a dead-end, but here goes.
I’m a poet. Sometimes I sit by the water and listen to it for hours, but that is not why I am a poet. Sometimes I think about how grass feels on the bottoms of bare feet, or about how the leaves in the trees are so green that they make my eyes feel heavy and drunk. Poetry, for me, though, is narcissistic and these things do not make me a poet, they just make a me a human.
So I can read passage after passage, line after line, word after word about people, places, things, feelings; authors will use descriptive words without giving any description. Though, when my quill hits the parchment, with a flourish I might add, it expresses only my innermost thoughts and desires. Every poem I write is me, and every one of them writes me as well. So it goes.
There are times when writing flows quickly, day in and out, like feelings. There are times when I sit at the bottom of the ocean like a rock and let the tides salt wash me with their coming and going, and my feelings sit under layers of silt, sand, and salt. Passion though, it’s a fire that never burns out; it will burn low, it will burn hot, but without it you are but wick and wax.
You said you were curious and so I have delivered to you my ramblings in their most sugary sweet form. You can repeat words endlessly, seeking simple semantic satiation, but feelings ought not be described. They ought to be felt.