|
1.
Every poet is an experimentalist.
2.
Learning to write is a simple process: read
something, then write something; read something
else, then write something else. And show
in your writing what you have read.
3.
There is no one way to write and no right
way to write.
4.
The good stuff and the bad stuff are all
part of the stuff. No good stuff without
bad stuff.
5.
Learn the rules, break the rules, make up
new rules, break the new rules.
6.
You do not learn from work like yours as
much as you learn from work unlike yours.
7.
Originality is a new amalgam of influences.
8.
Try to write poems at least one person in
the room will hate.
9.
The I in the poem is not you but someone
who knows a lot about you.
10.
Autobiography rots.
11.
A poem listens to itself as it goes.
12.
It's not what one begins with that matters;
it's the quality of attention paid to it
thereafter.
13.
Language is subjective and relative, but
it also overlaps; get on with it.
14.
Every free verse writer must reinvent free
verse.
15.
Prose is prose because of what it includes;
poetry is poetry because of what it leaves
out.
16.
A short poem need not be small.
17.
Rhyme and meter, too, can be experimental.
18.
Poetry has content but is not strictly about
its contents. A poem containing a tree may
not be about a tree.
19.
You need nothing more to write poems than
bits of string and thread and some dust from
under the bed.
20.
At heart, poetic beauty is tautological:
it defines its terms and exhausts them.
21.
The penalty for education is self-consciousness.
But it is too late for ignorance.
22.
What they say "there are no words for"--that's
what poetry is for. Poetry uses words to
go beyond words.
23.
One does not learn by having a teacher do
the work.
24.
The dictionary is beautiful; for some poets,
it's enough.
25.
Writing poetry is its own reward and needs
no certification. Poetry, like water, seeks
its own level.
26.
A finished poem is also the draft of a later
poem.
27.
A poet sees the differences between his or
her poems but a reader sees the similarities.
28.
Poetry is a manifestation of more important
things. On the one hand, it's poetry! On
the other, it's just poetry.
29.
Viewed in perspective, Parnassus is a very
short mountain.
30.
A good workshop continually signals that
we are all in this together, teacher too.
31.
This Depression Era jingle could be about
writing poetry: Use it up / wear it out /
make it do / or do without.
32.
Art is a way of life, not a career.
|Back|
Marvin
Bell's "32 Statements About Writing Poetry" is
reprinted from the Commemorative 2002 issue
of The Writer's Chronicle, copyright © 2002
by Marvin Bell.
|