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I remember when I first read Bukowski I thought he was a joke his poems weren’t even poems they were just a bunch of lines and sentences strung about like flimsy washing telling mundane stories about insipid things who was he to venerate Cummings (as if he had any of Edward’s profundity) and who was he to write poems about poets not writing poems or his simple lines propping up grossly defective and out of date words like jeroboams or how he’d drink (four-fifths a gallon of wine) then write more derivative lines who was he to live so long and write so much drivel and claptrap to other poets’ literary athleticism our darling Chuck was a pedestrian he was born a pensioner but never received a pension his poems flow like a river to no where and after reading them the first time I withdrew my poetic concern but then I read them again and then again and I realised I was in his poem’s stories and that foolish girl I knew that dense and brainless denizen of triteville was the heroine of his ‘splashing’ and his love for classical his love for wine and even his love for Edward matched even mine but most of all and here my rhetoric ends the moment I sighed oh yes when I read his poem yes you guessed it ‘oh, yes’ if not for his whimsical words or his misaligned wit love him for his grasp of regret and the sheer sentiment he can emit
0
Nov 18, 2012
Nov 18, 2012 at 2:08 AM UTC
note on bukowski
I remember when I first read Bukowski I thought he was a joke his poems weren’t even poems they were just a bunch of lines and sentences strung about like flimsy washing telling mundane stories about insipid things who was he to venerate Cummings (as if he had any of Edward’s profundity) and who was he to write poems about poets not writing poems or his simple lines propping up grossly defective and out of date words like jeroboams or how he’d drink (four-fifths a gallon of wine) then write more derivative lines who was he to live so long and write so much drivel and claptrap to other poets’ literary athleticism our darling Chuck was a pedestrian he was born a pensioner but never received a pension his poems flow like a river to no where and after reading them the first time I withdrew my poetic concern but then I read them again and then again and I realised I was in his poem’s stories and that foolish girl I knew that dense and brainless denizen of triteville was the heroine of his ‘splashing’ and his love for classical his love for wine and even his love for Edward matched even mine but most of all and here my rhetoric ends the moment I sighed oh yes when I read his poem yes you guessed it ‘oh, yes’ if not for his whimsical words or his misaligned wit love him for his grasp of regret and the sheer sentiment he can emit
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Australian
Nov 18, 2012
Nov 18, 2012 at 2:08 AM UTC
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