As Reviewed By: |
The Innocent Ear Some Thoughts on the Popular Disdain for Versification |
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# 1—That same year—1917—Pound
responded to “Reflections” in a review of Eliot’s poetry by
returning to his initial
point: In
a recent article Mr. Eliot contended, or seemed to contend, that good vers
libre was little more than a skillful evasion of the better known
English meters. His article was defective in that he omitted all
consideration of meters depending on quantity, alliteration, etc.; in
fact, he wrote as if all meters were measured by accent.
Neither Eliot’s oversimplification nor Pound’s insistence on subtleties much impressed the horde of fashionable vers librists who suddenly appeared in all the little magazines, and whose progeny continue to this day. *** # 2—In this, he is not entirely blameless. “To break the pentameter, that was the first heave,” as Pound famously declared, but he never said what the second revolution would bring. I suspect that Pound wanted poems to be written in several meters, rather than the repetition of a single foot, no matter how varied. Why not a stanza of trochees, followed by dactyls, followed by some other foot? As he proclaimed, "As regarding rhythm: to compose in the sequence of the musical phrase, not in sequence of a metronome." Varied feet then, not variable as William Carlos Williams so characteristically misconstrued.
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