October 20, 2003
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A
Norwegian Reader Says They Have Welfare Winners Too
John Derbyshire Writes James Fulford
On Free Verse, Blank Immigration Policy
From: John
Derbyshire [olimu@optonline.net]
I enjoyed James Fulford’s
account of Aldrich’s [anti-Emma
Lazarus] poem
“Unguarded Gates.” However, this is not, as
James asserts, blank verse. Blank verse is unrhymed
iambic pentameters, like
“Paradise Lost” or most of Shakespeare’s great
speeches (the
St. Crispin’s Day speech [audio]
in
Henry V,
for example). Aldrich’s poem is unrhymed but it is not
in
iambic pentameter (da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM
da-DUM), and therefore is not blank verse. It is
actually free verse: no consistent rhyme scheme,
no consistent meter.
The two best-known comments about
free verse—of which the 20th century produced
far, far too much—are as follows.
Robert Frost: "Like playing tennis without a
net."
G.K. Chesterton: "'Free verse'? You may as well
call sleeping in a ditch 'free architecture.'"
Just as you might call current U.S.
immigration-enforcement policies
"free citizenship.”
James Fulford replies:
John Derbyshire, who hasn't written for us in too
long, is quite right— both about the technical point he
raises, and about the artistic horror of
free verse. But for polemical purposes, I prefer
Aldrich’s poem, which neither
rhymes nor scans, to Robert Frost’s sentimental
Immigrants, which does both, and is used as
propaganda in the
public schools.
That’s not an artistic judgment; Frost was a genuinely
great poet, even if he would have gone beyond the
saying that
“Good fences make good neighbors.”
[Unsolicited testimonial: Derbyshire’s CD of
36 Great American Poems shows that he knows what
he’s talking about on the subject, his new book about
the
Riemann Hypothesis is available
here, his journalism can best be read
here.]