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A.E. Stallings
The Anti-MusesLike the Muses, they are attracted to talent and promising projects, and the presence of several at once probably means you are on to something big. Still, they can frustrate or even destroy the most inspired tender new poem, and send the poet into despair, alcoholism, or flash fiction. The more we know about them, the better. Their mother is Amnesia, “Forgetfulness.� They are goddesses, 13 in number: Typo Blabē Keno Krisis Tripsichorē Errato Anecdotē Telephonē Pezo Chimaera Polyhohumnia Hyperbolē Ann-Athema CommentsThese are awesome. (And only slightly Audenesque.) I should add only that some of the most popular living poets (I have one in mind, whose work I don't like very much) and some of the best of those recently deceased (again, I have one in mind) wrote about leisurely walks, w/ dog or w/o dog, quite often: mediocre poems on such subjects may strike their fans-- the fans who drive hours to cubicles-- as escape literature, and are not to be despised for it, though they may be despised for their general lack of interest, or predictability, or on other grounds. Perhaps Pezo also has a twin, Prostono, who governs tombstone blocks of prose disguized as prose-poems by their lack of line-breaks. And there's Chevrita, who brings forth the urge to write verse about losing virginity in the back seat of whatever. I can imagine your list of anti-muses expanded to dictionary size, and including a selection of anti-duendes. Thanks for making my day. Paul |
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