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It's
orientation day on campus, and the students are busy racing beds down St.
George, festooning trees with toilet-paper, inventing new inter-collegiate
profanities, and otherwise celebrating the start of the academic year. In my basement
office I doodle alphabets and flowers down the page in lieu of outlining a
schedule for my third-year course in creative writing. How does one
"schedule" creativity? How does one "teach" writing?
There are some gut instincts to
follow. I've just telephoned a young man to tell him he's been rejected from
the class. Gently, into the silence at the other end of the line, I explain
that although he exhibits a certain verbal facility and a humorous take on
romance, the 4-to-10-line apercus he's submitted are not substantial
enough to weigh in as poetry. I elucidate further that by "substance"
I mean both the persuasive embodiment of experience in language (the
"narrative" motive for poetry) and a full deployment of the resources
of language itself (the "lyric" motive). The balance between
narrative and lyric varies widely from poem to poem between the extremes of
free-verse storytelling in conventional language and syntax and highly-wrought
rhymed-and-metered poetic diction. But in
balancing these two motives, in achieving their own internal equipoise,
all good poems attain intensity, density and substance: an authority of voice and vision that engages
the reader more fully with life. I tell the young man that the stuff he's sent
in doesn't have that authority; that it's mostly notes towards poems, and I'd
need to see a couple of really worked-through pieces in order to admit him to
the class.
Can he understand me? Probably not. As with most beginning poets, he is so intoxicated with the lines that are given to him he can't recognize that they must be lines to, not just lines from (the Muse, the Unconscious, whatever). Like the punch-drunk freshmen outside, he's playing at beginnings. The responsibility of middles, the terror of endings, haven't yet cast their shadows on his page. But it is these shadows—the spaces between the lines that are given—that interest me more and more. It is when we go beyond our delight in language and our need to "express" ourselves, when we let ourselves plummet down the rabbit hole where word and world intersect, that we find out why we're writing at all and whether we do have anything to say. Perhaps, as a creative-writing "teacher", my role is to disorient my students!
© copyright Susan Glickman 1990