About 5 years ago now, I took a picture of snail climbing one of the handrails at my then-office. One does not expect to find such a thing on the way in to work, so I remarked on it, took the picture, and thought to myself: “snailing on the railing ... heheh.”
A few weeks later I took this lame piece of doggerel and turned it into a whole lame poem. Now, understand: I believe that I’m a pretty good writer. But that doesn’t make me a good poet ... in point of fact, I’m a mediocre poet, and even then my college poetry professor might call that bragging. But every once in a great while I’m struck by ... something ... and I write a smaller piece, nearly always something with a definite rhyme scheme but playing fast and loose with the meter. None of them have ever been any good, really, although I’m quite fond of the very first one of these I wrote, although my poetry professor called it “trite,” or “overblown,” or possibly both of those, or something else equally soul-crushing—
But I’m okay with that. I don’t write poetry very often anyway. I don’t read poetry very often either (probably those two things are connected). The poems I like are typically not free verse: they have boundaries, even if they push them. I like “The Walrus and the Carpenter” by Lewis Carroll, and I like “The Raven” by Edgar Allen Poe. Perhaps most relevantly to the effort below, I like “anyone lived in a pretty how town” by E. E. Cummings. But perhaps before we start deconstructing my piece, we should take a look at what it looks like when it’s all constructed. Below is the picture, and the poem.
there’s a snailing on the railing and I cannot help but think it’s a failing of the trailing having once been on the brink what one decides as he resides here—it makes me wonder more what he’s tailing unassailing what he even came here for was he unhappy? home life crappy? thought he’d see the great wide world? was he ailing? and now prevailing with his destiny unfurled? does he regret it find it fetid the universe beyond his sill p’raps he’s wailing even flailing wishes to be back there still then again heightened completely unfrightened maybe all along his goal this peak he’s scaling grit unfailing to match the soaring of his soul I wish to draw it full even if implausible to slake my yearning fancy to add more detailing than only mere surveilling or traipsing off feeling antsy because otherwise (if I may summarize) this image is just too plain and it’s merely a snailing here on the railing and that would seem a shame
This is not much changed from what I originally wrote, those 5 years ago. I fixed a few clumsy word choices and cleaned up the meter slightly ... which is not to say that many of the word choices are not still clumsy, or that the meter is now untortured. But it’s better than my initial off-the-cuff effort (just take my word for it).
Looking back on it somewhat critically, it seems to have some things in common with Cummings. The lack of capitalization is the most obvious—
Well, mostly. I’m sort of telling you to let yourself be guided by the line breaks: the lack of punctuation and capitalization is just a way to say, hang on to the flow of the individual lines, because there’s nothing else to hang on to.
The message of the piece is pretty obvious, because my poetry is not good enough to be subtle. It’s just a brief musing on the human desire to assign meaning to things, even when they probably don’t mean much of anything. But, more than anything, I’m just having some fun with language. This is way more inventive with rhyme than I’m prone to; rhyming (or perhaps I should say attempting to rhyme) “implausible” with “draw it full” is way more ballsy than I normally am with poetry. But, hey: you gotta take chances in life in order to find out what works and what doesn’t. In this case, it probably doesn’t, but I’m glad I made the attempt in any case.
So I’m being a bit self-deprecative, obviously, but I guess I must be a little bit proud of it, or I wouldn’t have resurrected it after 5 years, and subjected it to public scrutiny here on the blog. Or maybe I just ran out of time and didn’t have anything else to give you this week. Either way, I hope you’ve enjoyed it.