Back in 2017, the Steiny Road Poet (a.k.a Karren Alenier) vented her distaste about what was happening in the United States government by writing a short series of poems that combined two forms—the acrostic and some other form like sonnet, pantoum, or one she invented. She only half heartedly sent them out—in fact, each of the four poems featured in this essay were sent to only two publishers.
Recently the following two sonnets were published in Winedrunk Sidewalk, a blog that has been publishing poems daily since January 20, 2017 that take on president 45 and his minions.
A WIDOW STARTS A LETTER TO HER BELOVED JR (1951-2016)
D ear One since your quick transition something O dious shocked the Nation our planet N eeding time to heal I was slow to share A ll actions accruing to wrong doing L iving without your love ups the threat D espite who won I’ll negate the nightmare
T roubling to laud the democratic way R esisting climate change national debt U ncapped by repeal and replace healthcare M oney laundering lies racism praised P ause there
THE WIDOW CONTINUES A LETTER TO HER BELOVED JR (1951-2016)
How is it Dear One the world has come to Impossible crossroads so onerous Leading to a TV reality Lampoon in which a business man unglues Arteries of peace touchy tenuous Rescue Dear Boyscout I need honesty Your absence impedes my sore levity
Certainly we believe in a woman Leader one who is clever ambitious Intelligent knowing truth from fake news Need I say My Love we have a madman Tweeting like an angry bird dangerous Out to undo everything we deem true Nothing but bad hairdo and worse juju
The first poem is a curtal sonnet (meaning a short sonnet having 11 lines and the last line has only two syllables). The reader can easily see what name the acrostic spells out down the left-hand side of the poem.
Companion to the short sonnet, the second poem is a regular sonnet of fourteen lines, however, it is a modern sonnet not concerned with an established rhyme pattern, such as a Shakespearian sonnet (abab, bcbc, cdcd, ee). It does however have its own rhyme pattern abcabcc dbadbaa. With a little effort, the reader can discern in the acrostic letters down the left-hand side , the name of the woman who ran against 45 in the last US presidential election.
Both of these poems seem plugged into today’s current events. The Dresser is satisfied that these two poem merited publication.
On the other hand, poems number 3 and 4 don’t hold up under the test of time.
THE WIDOW RANTS IN A LETTER TO HER BELOVED JR (1951-2016)
Please Darling I need your full attention American democracy is deep Under dire presidential duress Law makers like the current House speaker
Report U.S. democracy deeply Yielding to ratify the little guy All law makers like sitting House Speaker Negate reason prefer alternate facts
Nodding to gratify the little guy Anxious politicians push tax reform Yessing reason mouthing alternate facts Real suffering people will lose health care
Lying politicians promote tax reform Under dire presidential duress Ailing people can’t afford their health care Please Darling I need your full attention
The acrostic which spells forward and backwards the name of a former Speaker of the House makes this pantoum dated. The Dresser can say, maybe this poem worked as an incantation against that Speaker who was happy with “alternate facts.” The truth is that the Dresser would prefer that the world forget this Speaker.
THE WIDOW JIVES WITH HER BELOVED JR (1951-2016)
Jimbo now that I have your attention Are you concerned about voting justice Maybe FBI directors don’t count Especially when they turn election Statistics who said the Russians meddled
Controversy over email justice Or female harassment odd attention Mandating perhaps a new election Even the Russians not sure who meddled Yo my man in heaven come on what counts
Likewise the acrostic in the poem number 4, which spells out the name of a fired FBI director, dates the poem. Perhaps the poem continues to have some merit since we still have the problem, at least among Republicans, about confirming Russian interference in the 2016 election. However, the Dresser would rather zero out this man because he, like the Russians, messed with the 2016 election. Notice that this poem repeats the end words of stanza one but not in the same order. The poem is a nonce form, meaning it has a pattern but doesn’t have a name—ergo invented by the writer.
So the poetics of writing political poetry that will have any staying power is to avoid naming the people in politics. Naming them even in a hidden way might be clever but it is still bad juju. Better to effect the obscurity of Gertrude Stein’s Tender Buttons where she writes about such unmentionable things in her time as same sex love and marriage.
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