Poetry workshop comments: A short Glossary
Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2007 6:29 am
POETRY WORKSHOP COMMENTS: A short glossary
I'd like to hear that again = I was half asleep with boredom.
That's your best one yet = They're all rubbish.
I'm sure that should be published = You'll never find a publisher.
If you left out the first two and last two lines and reworked stanza four = Scrap it.
Where did you get that idea? = Rubbish.
The language is so unusual in this poem = The language is grammatically
and syntactictically incomprehensible.
How many have you written in this sequence? =It's remarkably boring.
Did that actually happen? = What a sordid life you must lead.
You've captured the whole scene = It's overworded and prosy.
That's a prizewinner = But, no chance.
You're good at that kind of thing = None of us understand it.
That's very sad = You're so depressing.
Do you have any more like this? = Burn them.
You've obviosuly spent some time on that = You've killed the whole idea.
When did you write that one? = obviosuly one of your early efforts.
That's an unusual approach = It's totally unintelligible.
Your "voice" is really in that poem = Same old monotonous verbiage.
James Hall Thomson (From the Poetry Scotland website.)
I have heard all of these comments before (not always used about my poems) and used some of them myself! I think there is an etiquette to workshop critiqueing that we would all do well to observe. If one must insist on telling the author of a poem that their images are 'tired' and 'lazy', 'not poetry', etc., then do it with some humanity.
I'd like to hear that again = I was half asleep with boredom.
That's your best one yet = They're all rubbish.
I'm sure that should be published = You'll never find a publisher.
If you left out the first two and last two lines and reworked stanza four = Scrap it.
Where did you get that idea? = Rubbish.
The language is so unusual in this poem = The language is grammatically
and syntactictically incomprehensible.
How many have you written in this sequence? =It's remarkably boring.
Did that actually happen? = What a sordid life you must lead.
You've captured the whole scene = It's overworded and prosy.
That's a prizewinner = But, no chance.
You're good at that kind of thing = None of us understand it.
That's very sad = You're so depressing.
Do you have any more like this? = Burn them.
You've obviosuly spent some time on that = You've killed the whole idea.
When did you write that one? = obviosuly one of your early efforts.
That's an unusual approach = It's totally unintelligible.
Your "voice" is really in that poem = Same old monotonous verbiage.
James Hall Thomson (From the Poetry Scotland website.)
I have heard all of these comments before (not always used about my poems) and used some of them myself! I think there is an etiquette to workshop critiqueing that we would all do well to observe. If one must insist on telling the author of a poem that their images are 'tired' and 'lazy', 'not poetry', etc., then do it with some humanity.