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The Joy of Bad Verse (Paperback)
Loot Price: R466
Discovery Miles 4 660
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The Joy of Bad Verse (Paperback)
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Loot Price R466
Discovery Miles 4 660
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This second edition of Nicholas T. Parsons' The Joy of Bad Verse is
accompanied by a new and expanded Introduction that considers the
remarkable literary phenomenon of bad poetry down the ages and the
remarkable chutzpah of its practitioners. It brings the theme up to
date with the current eruption of "instapoetry" on Instagram,
poetry happenings and other whimsical contributions to the tsunami
of verse now washing over social media. This book celebrates such
remarkable poets as Julia A. Moore, who was known as "The Sweet
Singer of Michigan"; or Solyman Brown, the Laureate of American
dentistry; or the Rev. E.E. Bradford whose wonderfully innocent
raptures on (preferably naked) pubescent boys were praised by the
Westminster Review as wholesome and uplifting. Of course the iconic
figure of William McGonagall, "the Scottish Homer", is not
neglected. To him and several others such as Martin Tupper, a
forerunner of "Thought for the Day" and many an Anglican sermon,
biographical sketches are dedicated. The chapter on "Limping
Laureates" rescues from deserved obscurity several persons such as
Alfred Austin who achieved this poorly remunerated, but sought
after, status without actually being any good at writing poetry. In
this world of wonders, wooden ideological verse (including the
brown-nosing of political monsters in verse) jostles with banality,
virtue-signalling and unintentional comedy. Not forgetting the
contribution of real poets on an off day (Wordsworth's inimitable
tribute to a stuffed owl), which, as the author says, lend a
distinction to the genre. Auberon Waugh once lambasted modern
poetry because it neither rhymed, scanned nor made sense. But here
is a treasure trove of stuff to read out loud, stuff which mostly
rhymes, if unfortunately, scans if the author was in the mood, and
makes the sort of sense that leaves you gasping for more.
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