This article is taken from PN Review 148, Volume 29 Number 2, November - December 2002.
Writing the Poem[This essay is an abridged version of an illustrated talk given in April 1999 at the Poetry Centre, University of Manchester as part of the Re Writing the Poem series of readings and papers given by distinguished visiting poets, 1998-2001. The collected set of essays will be published by Carcanet.
Each visitor has been asked to respond to whatever topics they felt relevant from a suggested rubric, part of which is reproduced here:
- do you habitually make several/many drafts of your poem?
- is your typical method of re-writing to change a line, a word - a 'piece by piece' mode? Or do you often make more wholesale changes?
- how far is your re-drafting impelled by considerations of tone? Or of metrical structure?
- do you have any method of 'ultimate arbitration' - for example, reading the poem aloud after its composition, and making any changes consequent on that?
- how far are your re-writings influenced by the eventual look of the text on the page?
- to what extent are re-drafts driven by the tone and structure of the collection of which the relevant poem is to be a part?
- do you show or read your work to others while it is in the process of construction? If so, how do others' comments influence your re-drafting procedures?
- have your methods of (re)writing changed over the years?
- how far ...
The page you have requested is restricted to subscribers only. Please enter your username and password and click on 'Continue'.
If you have forgotten your username and password, please enter the email address you used when you joined. Your login details will then be emailed to the address specified.
If you are not a subscriber and would like to enjoy the 285 issues containing over 11,500 poems, articles, reports, interviews and reviews, why not subscribe to the website today?
If you have forgotten your username and password, please enter the email address you used when you joined. Your login details will then be emailed to the address specified.
If you are not a subscriber and would like to enjoy the 285 issues containing over 11,500 poems, articles, reports, interviews and reviews, why not subscribe to the website today?