In August 2020, I wrote about the Queen’s English Society (QES). Click to See
I make occasional contributions to its quarterly magazine, Quest. Most articles published in Quest are serious forays into aspects of the English language such as the use of punctuation or the seeming demise of the apostrophe.
My offerings are always of a much lighter tone than the others such as how much I hate Scrabble or how I abhor the use of phrases like “twenty-four/seven” and “any time soon.” I’ve had 22 pieces published so far and the feedback that appears after any of them shows that the Quest readers have spotted that I am not a serious, intellectual man of letters.
About two years ago, the QES introduced a quarterly poetry competition. I have found this event to be somewhat problematic. The first difficulty I encountered was working out, what is a poem?
I’ve always thought that a poem is a piece of writing in which the words are arranged in a way that conveys information, emotion, and above all, has rhythm or pattern.
I don’t believe that rhyme is essential in a poem although I do feel that rhyme or assonance can add to the beauty of poetry. I very much enjoy reading “Poem in October” by Dylan Thomas and I have found that its rhythm is improved by reading it to myself in an imagined Welsh accent.
After reading the QES winning poems in the early competitions, I realised that my idea of what a poem is differs from that of the judge.
Theft
By the time I return, he’s in love
with someone else. They live
in a garden with clothes lines
flapping, the sound of children.
He sits there, sketching,
delicious slivers of drawing.
She leans on her elbows,
watching. They can’t see me.
I creep round the edges.
One of their children
has lost a blue shoe, I find it
under a rose bush, I pick it up,
it’s mine now. Mine.
This is a winning “poem” according to the QES judge but I find it pretentious and poorly punctuated prose with random line-length. It is not a poem – in my opinion.
No one lives in a garden and clothes lines can’t flap. The comma after ‘flapping’ should be a full stop but then, ‘The sound of children.’ isn’t a sentence.
Why the comma after ‘sketching’ and what on earth is ‘a sliver of drawing.’? There should be full stops after ‘shoe’ and ‘bush’.
Why do poems with rhyme seem to be so out of fashion nowadays? £5,000 was awarded to the winning poem in the latest Poetry Society national competition. The whole thing is 26 lines long. Here are the first six:
The Time I was Mugged in New York City
I told people that the travel sickness pills
made me stupid. I entered JFK with a red
suitcase and no one to greet me. A man
came up to me, dressed in black. I found
myself in a car park by an expensive van
and he was holding my luggage. Get in, he said.
How on earth can that piece of prose be described as a poem? It has neither rhythm nor pattern and certainly no rhyme. Remove the random line length and it no longer even pretends to be a poem:
The Time I was mugged in New York City
I told people that the travel sickness pills made me stupid. I entered JFK with a red suitcase and no one to greet me. A man came up to me, dressed in black. I found myself in a car park by an expensive van and he was holding my luggage. Get in, he said.
£5,000? WTF!
I have never been tempted to write a poem on the QES competition’s set theme. I don’t think much of set themes.
No one ever said to Keats anything like, “John, I would really like you to write a poem about the song of the Nightingale. Can you get something to me by end of the month please?”
No, Keats was inspired by hearing its song while sitting in a garden in Hampstead. I think it’s interesting that the word “Nightingale” doesn’t appear anywhere in the 80 lines of the poem. I wonder if it would have had the lasting world-wide acclaim and admiration if Keats had titled it “Ode to a Pigeon” rather than “Ode to a Nightingale”.
During Covid, I was moved to write a poem. It is actually a parody of “An Irish Airman Foresees His Death” by W B Yeats.
Yeats imagined the thoughts of an Irish airman who had volunteered to fight for the United Kingdom during the first world war.
Ireland gained independence in 1921 and in 1918, when that poem was written, no Irishman would sign up to fight out of loyalty or patriotism to the UK. The airman just wanted to fly.
This is Yeats’ first verse:
I know that I shall meet my fate
Somewhere among the clouds above;
Those that I fight I do not hate,
Those that I guard I do not love;
My version was written as a result of a trip to Tesco when I (and everyone else within 40 miles) heard that they had toilet rolls in stock.
I know that I shall meet my fate
Somewhere in Tesco’s push and shove.
Those that I barge, I do not hate
Those that I don’t, I do not love.
My shopping is just essential
And will only fill two small bags.
Their urge to buy seems exponential
Topped up with toilet rolls and fags.
No rise in price could bring them grief
Nor driving rain keep them away.
It was all done through gritted teeth
I ventured forth that dreadful day.
I balanced all, brought all to mind.
Was it all really so worthwhile
To find the worst in humankind
By standing in a Tesco aisle?
Most songs, especially those written more than 50 years ago, are melodic poetry and many have haunting memorable tunes.
Here are the first two verses of ‘You Belong to Me”. It was written in 1952 and despite the final line of every verse being perhaps a little threatening, it is basic poetry.
See the pyramids along the Nile
Watch the sun rise on a tropic isle
Just remember, darling, all the while
You belong to me.
See the marketplace in old Algiers
Send me photographs and souvenirs
Just remember when a dream appears
You belong to me.
Virtually all the lyrics of the Beatles’ songs have a fundamental poetic element to them. This is the first verse of “I’m Happy Just to Dance With You”, one of their earliest songs from 1964.
I don’t want to kiss or hold your hand
If it’s funny try and understand
There is really nothing else I’d rather do
‘Cos I’m happy just to dance with you.
Modern songs just aren’t the same. Here is the opening passage of “Shape of You”, Ed Sheehan’s best-selling song, ever. It spent 14 weeks at Number 1, and its total combined sales at the moment stand at 5.09 million:
The club isn't the best place to find a lover
So the bar is where I go
Me and my friends at the table doing shots
Drinking fast and then we talk slow
Come over and start up a conversation with just me
And trust me I'll give it a chance now
Take my hand, stop, put Van the Man on the jukebox
And then we start to dance, and now I'm singin' like
See what I mean?
You probably can't remember the tune either.