Dear Charles,
 
I found your post (see below) quite fascinating and self-assured.
I wish, however, that you could help me out by actually defining
how you separate verse from poetry. If, as you say, it is not a
question of quality (what is good or bad), there must be other
defining characteristics. It's simply not a distinction I've
encountered before.
 
Matthew Roth
 
On Tue, 31 Oct 2006 03:08:18 EST, Chaswe@AOL.COM wrote:
 
>
>Matthew  wrote:
>⤽I'm not sure that the  distinction between "well-crafted verse"
and "poetry"
>is any distinction at  all.  One can argue whether or not a  poem is
good,
>but you seem to be saying that in order for something to be called  a
poem at
>all, it must be a great work of art.
>By this logic, there is no  such thing as a bad poem, since the terms are
>mutually exclusive.â¤
>
>Matthew,
>Aware though I am that  ⤽verse⤠ may assume meanings unfamiliar to us
English
>across the Atlantic (Iâ¤Tm assuming you teach at Messiah), and that our 
common
>language may be dividing us, I still think a distinction between verse 
and
>poetry should be maintained.  There is verse, good and bad; and there is
>poetry, good and bad. Johnson  of course noted that it is easier to say
what is not
>poetry than to say what it  is.   
>Wordsworth wrote reams  of verse, some of which is great poetry. Some of
his
>greatest poetry is not  verse. Much of his verse is poor. I canâ¤Tt
comment on
>Goldsmith, Wordsmith or  Goldsworth. Marvell wrote some of the most
marvellous
>poetry in the English  language. He also wrote many excellent verse
satires.
>The one was not the other.  Grayâ¤Ts Elegy is verse which is also poetry.
Ogden
>Nash wrote superb verse: none  of it is poetry. Much of Pope is verse,
but some
>of it is poetry. Dryden wrote  much verse which is also poetry. Not all
>Shakespeare is poetry, but enormous  amounts of him are; almost all of
Dylan Thomas
>is poetry. The former long  preceded Roget; the fact that the latter
thumbed
>his well is of no relevance at  all.
>Rebecca Wolffâ¤Ts  comment on Pale Fire the poem: a ⤽virtuousic foray
into
>deep metapathos⤠ does  not seem to me to address this issue. It even
seems to
>dodge it. I am aware of  scholars of distinction who do not consider Pale
Fire
>the poem to be poetry, but  Iâ¤Tll withhold their names to protect their
>innocence. Personally I consider Pale  Fire the book to be poetic.
>The distinction seems  to me to resemble the difference between craft and
>art. Craft can be learned and  acquired by diligence and application; art
cannot.
>Joyceâ¤Ts Ulysses is craft of a  very high order. If Iâ¤Td had Joyceâ¤Ts
obsessive
>dedication I might have produced  something similar within my lifetime. I
>could never have produced Pale Fire the  book, not if I lived for a
thousand
>years.
>Regards
>Charles

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