Popular Posts
-
The moon petals the sea. Rose petals the sea. Stone sea. Stone petals. Rose petals of stone. Stone rising before me. Sea moves. How moves...
-
It all depends, you see, how you go about it. And that I cannot tell you, for that will be dictated by you and by you knowing your friends...
-
extract from the poem Koi by John Burnside All afternoon we've wandered from the pool to alpine beds and roses ...
-
Hello everyone who follows David King (My Father). On behalf of the family this post is to let you know that Dad sadly passed away, peacefu...
-
The image below was sent to me in an email. It is obviously doing the rounds, so you may have seen it. It is the sunset at the North Pole wi...
12 comments:
And haven't we all endured speakers like that. Often while still at school.
whew...sounds like its time to take a nap and the next speaker be a little more interesting...
Oh no ... love the imagery
Oh dear! (can't you doodle?!) Ha! Excruciating. k.
Ah yes, I think I have heard this man! Zzzzzzz
I don't understand the hub of the matter actually, but I find the tone most entertaining and fascinating.
It's the dripping taps!
The boredom I can stand,
but it's those dripping taps!!
I have to say that I saw a couple of speakers like that one just a couple of days ago. PowerPoint presentations that were read in a monotonous tone rather than being talked through. Oh, yes, I recognise that public speaker.
Greetings from London.
General
Interesting, I've been experimenting with prose poetry of late and this was one attempt. I'm still not sure. I suspect that Ygraine sussed that it could be lineated in traditional poetic form. Here it is thus presented:-
The delivery is slow,
the text is dry and technical:
the two taps drip in unison
like water run to waste.
It's like a chef would have us watch
the Brussels being topped,
the potatoes being peeled
before he serves them raw.
Not sure what that says about my attempts at prose poetry.
The Elephant's Child
Probably. I know I have - and even more so, whilst teaching.
Brian
Sounds like a good idea.
jane
Thanks a lot,Jane.
manicddaily
Doodles are too revealing, I always think.
Mary
You have him!
Tommaso
Maybe in its new manifestation above?
Ygraine
Lovely. Thanks so much.
A Cuban in London
Yes, they are very prevalent, I'm afraid. I think think of so many occasions before I retired when speakers did just that: read what was on the screen - as though we couldn't! - in a tone to send us all to sleep.
Good description of a public speaker; nowadays all of them seem cut by the same pattern.
About the difference between prose and poetry, the latter is more than a fixed number of verse lines arranged in a definite metrical pattern. The form is not essential; the spirit is not either.
Poetry is to prose as ballet is to disco dance or, as Charlotte Brontë said, "as Edinburgh is to London".
I like Frost's definition, "Poetry is what gets lost in translation." Nobody can't translate the words of a true poem in such a way as to translate their meaning and, at the same time, reproduce their original rhythm and tones, their same aural values, all those nuances of symbols and sounds which are the essence of a good poem.
A good poet is that genius able to mix the sounds and meaning of words in such a way that a miracle is performed.
Poetry is a gift, same as elegance, something innate; and more than that, a kind of revelation.
Dulcina
Yup, I think I pretty much agree with all of that, though I might bulk at as London is to Edinburgh ! Thanks for your thoughts.
Post a Comment