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    —Eugene McCarthy
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    What Could Be Verse?

    By Lester | June 15, 2009

    The first time that I ever wrote a sonnet,
    ’Twas filled with grand Romantic affectation,
    As tho’ perhaps Shelley or Keats had done it
    And I had merely taken poor dictation.

    And so I tried to write free verse instead,
    Which left me feeling somewhat loose and sore
    As if, instead of a four-poster bed,
    I’d slept in random rags tossed on the floor.

    Up next, I thought maybe my talents tended
    Toward more sentenced verse—the prosy poem.
    But how to tell when such a thing was ended?
    If there are secrets to it, I don’t know ’em.

    So back to fourteen lines my hand has come,
    And five fixed feet remains my rule of thumb.
     
     
    —Lester Smith
     
     
    (Originally appeared in WFOP Museletter, summer 2009.)

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