No problem Kalen, I understand. Poetry is generally the red-headed stepchild of the literature disciplines. But that's because Walt Whitman let loose a generation of uninscribed scribblers with his "Spontaneous me" nonsense and now people confuse free verse spontaneity for being good. Free verse has devolved to beatniks snapping their fingers and chanting "radiant cool nightmare, zen new jersey nowhere...how now brown beaurocrats" (I forget who wrote that..I wanna say Matt Groening). Or worse still, Stuart Scott on SportsCenter with that "Stephan Marbury, such a starbury," ridin' around in his car-bury... Blech!
That's why I think it's important to write metered poetry, to show some skill in crafting something.
So Kirk is right...I used to be the poetry hater in the back of the class too. But I have a friend at Harvard who just wrote an award winning book of poems based on her great grammas letters she sent home to Maine from Siberia and I've been reading eliot too. So when i was interviewing Jones on architecture and he compared a golf hole to a TS Eliot poem, well then the two of us started clucking away like broody old hens.
Kirk, I'll take your advice for the next installment. I'll merely present the poems from St. Andrews, Oakmont, Chambers bay, and the others with less analysis. I tried to keep the analysis in the last piece to a minimum - just pointing out a few common themes. After that, there'll be plenty of golf.
By the way kalen I loved your "beard-pulling" image, that was great!
Hey BTW - you gotta admit. That "Wine" poem gives new meaning to the phrase "Poetry Slam."