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Ars poetica

The meteoric rise in the academic sanctioning of poets since the 1970s has made "ars poetica" one of the things never far from my mind.

T.S. Eliot skips Pigalle

Market Forces sinned mortally in the 1920s*
when they boosted the timid patrician, Eliot,
at the expense of the bold physician, Williams.

Thus, America’s windshield is transformed
into a rear-view mirror, where objects never
are as they appear to naked eyes.

T. S. Eliot walked backwards through life –
contrary to the path of sun-worshipping civilisation,
he moved ever eastward, away from newborn

Missouri, and youthful New England, clear
across the sea to ancient Oxford, where non-
American subjects know their places.

A century later, we know that Mr. Eliot
lacked the sort of hands-on training
found readily due east of England.

Though dons and tutors are good for some,
for the lessons needed by young Tom,
the right professor was la madame.

Dave Read

*Eliot’s The Waste Land was published in 1922; William Carlos Williams published Spring and All in 1923.

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