The Freedom of New Poetry
By Wan Longsheng
People are born with the desire for freedom. “Fighting for freedom”---the slogan is so inspiring that many people even sacrifice their lives for it. “Give me liberty, or give me death” has become the conviction of those with lofty ideals.
But the concept of freedom varies in different fields. Under no circumstances is anybody given absolute freedom in social, ethic and legal domains. And art is no exception. Goethe remarked long ago that creation can only find freedom in confinement.
Nevertheless, most contemporary Chinese poets do not have a sufficient understanding of what “freedom” really means. They have grabbed the so-called “free poetry” as a weapon supporting their arrogant intrusion and invincible take-over of the poetry world. The mention of meter incurs their contempt or even hostility. They enjoy eradicating meter from their poems and justify themselves by accusing it of hindering the spontaneous flow of their creativity. However, they rarely understand the dialectics of art---confinement and freedom are reciprocal---they constrain and depend on each other. Scores of years’ exploration has found New Poetry as the key to the balance between confinement and freedom.
Unlike what a layman arbitrarily asserts, the poets who have a good command of the rules of New Poetry are quite free to compose poems, like giving birth to babies, handsome and spirited. Similarly, a brilliant artisan adeptly employs his tools to create various works of art that feast the eye, which are nor monotonous and boring copies, but live sprites.
New Poetry falls into three categories, and each of them has their own tricks. Mastering and using these rules is conducive to the expression than hinder it, and assists the poets in attaining the freedom from the confinement rather than lose it. I will elaborate the three categories as the followings:
1. Neat pattern
Regardless of how many words or feet the first line contains, it is the reference for the following lines. The next step is the decision of the stanza pattern--- how many lines to comprise a stanza and what rhyming scheme to choose? Once the poet has expressed what he wants to, a piece of art is there.
This is merely the commonest employment of a neat pattern. A poem with the same length and feet in each line can be divided into different stanza patterns according to the emotional variations. For instance, sonnets do not have stereotyped fourteen lines; octets can either have two four-line stanzas or four two-line stanzas; in addition, it has special patterns like two/four/two and three/one/three/one lines. There are also poems of random lines with variable stanzas.
As I referred in a different essay, the composition of a neat pattern can also be developed into “varied length with same feet” and “varied length with varied feet”; namely, different stanzas can choose different reference lines. This contributes to greater freedom.
2. Irregular symmetric pattern.
If the initial inspiration refuses to be expressed in a neat pattern, it will turn to an irregular pattern to form the first stanza. Sequentially, as a reference, the first stanza will be “cloned” into an irregularly-patterned poem. And diverse reference stanzas contribute to various irregularly-patterned poems. This is a process from freedom to non-freedom, and the subsequent non-freedom, finding a path to beat, has actually acquired “freedom” to some degree.
Moreover, an irregularly-patterned poem is allowed to have two or more reference stanzas and inside each stanza, various symmetrical styles can be formed, which endows the poem with diversity and inflexibility.
3. Compound pattern.
Wheeled by the expression, a poem can contain both neat and irregular patterns in different parts, which undoubtedly promises greater freedom during creation.
The above analysis replies to the common but unreasonable accusation of New Poetry from the perspective of the freedom of creation. Just like “the infinite richness of styles” of New Poetry I proposed in another essay, this essay is actually the extension of my “infinite practicality” theory.
(Tr Yin JingJing ; Proofread by zhao yanchun)
|