Garden of Verse
by James Graham
Posted: Friday, December 14, 2012 Word Count: 125 Summary: Well, I was quite chuffed with Dave's latest poem. And it has given me an idea. If poetry is like dining, it can be like one of my other favourite pastimes too - gardening. |
Garden of Verse
Some like
formality:
neat little couplets
and tercets of lawn,
gentian-pentameters,
stanzas of box-hedge,
sonnets of cypress
But I prefer free:
banks of herbaceous imagery, red
and gold metaphors, similes lush
as snowdrifts. There’s room
for wild words too, colloquial daisies,
the vulgar ragwort. Some verses
tend to straggle, must be pruned,
dead wood lopped off - but I like
the poem to form its natural
habit. A little cameo
is nice: a border, east-facing,
of Tanka japonica. But mostly free,
just keeping the edges tidy,
not letting the cliches spread.
I see a mighty epic,
deep-rooted, many-branched,
filling the space at the end of my dreams,
good for a thousand years
but there’s not enough room.
There’s room for a folly.
Some like
formality:
neat little couplets
and tercets of lawn,
gentian-pentameters,
stanzas of box-hedge,
sonnets of cypress
But I prefer free:
banks of herbaceous imagery, red
and gold metaphors, similes lush
as snowdrifts. There’s room
for wild words too, colloquial daisies,
the vulgar ragwort. Some verses
tend to straggle, must be pruned,
dead wood lopped off - but I like
the poem to form its natural
habit. A little cameo
is nice: a border, east-facing,
of Tanka japonica. But mostly free,
just keeping the edges tidy,
not letting the cliches spread.
I see a mighty epic,
deep-rooted, many-branched,
filling the space at the end of my dreams,
good for a thousand years
but there’s not enough room.
There’s room for a folly.