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| What makes a poem memorable? | Journal | What makes a poem forgettable? |
| The memorable poem is one that creates and inhabits a verbal world that is new and convincing. Among its attributes are: striking language, distinctive and/or idiosyncratic voice, wit, energy, mystery, surprise, and a level of complexity that rewards rereading. | American Letters & Commentary:Anna Rabinowitz and Jeanne Marie Beaumont | Dull, generic language, overwriting, clichéd subject matter, predictability, simplistic ideas, obscurity for its own sake, copycat style or approach. |
| Thoughtful comportment of language revealing the true. | Apostrophe:Sheila Tombe | Cliché, contrivance, sentimental indulgence. |
| See T.S. Eliot, Matthew Arnold, Alexander Pope. I can't put it better in two lines. | The Bridge:Jack Zucker | Bad craft, stilted subject matter. |
| Original settings or subject matter. Poems with some narrative aspect tend to be more memorable than pure reverie. Concrete details always make a poem more memorable. It's worth noting that very bad poems are quite as memorable as very good ones. | The Carolina Quarterly:Robert West | Lack of concrete detail, pervasive didacticism, uninteresting titles (such as Sonnet 98). |
| A memorable poem merges music and meaning into a cohesive work of art that says something significant; its figurative language is rich, full, distinctive. | ELF: Eclectic Literary Forum:C. K. Erbes | To paraphrase Pope, a forgettable poem says what was often thought and better expressed by someone else. |
| Themes which move us at a deep level and which are beautifully, originally presented in both language and image; images and language will be perfectly melded into a meaning/idea worth remembering. | Kalliope, a Journal of Women's Art:Mary Sue Koeppel | Cynicism; trite or boring images, themes, language; no emotional reaction for the reader; lovely language but no meaning. |
| In the basic sense of that word (mnemonic), rhyme & meter. If you mean "immortal," the answer is genius, whatever that is. | The Literary Review:William Zander | Prosiness. |
| Sharp, focused language. A memorable poem is one which stands out among the flood of submissions and places a crisp idea into the readers' minds. Abstraction should be avoided. | Lullwater Review:Eric Brignac | A plethora of nebulous words like love, very, passionate feelings, etc. |
| Zip, spice, & mambo. The language should dance and (regardless of its "genre") it should surprise, creating a sense of "WOW" in the reader. The poem should be an experience in addition to being about an experience. | Phoebe: A Journal of Literary Arts:Christopher Putnam | Mayonnaise: flat, easy language. |
| Idiomatic language and fresh imagery, especially metaphors. | The Sewanee Review:George Core | Tired language (clichés), poetry that is self-consciously poetic, oft-used metaphors, lack of drama, excessive abstraction. |
| A sharp, memorable, confident use of language which releases feeling, and keeps releasing it with repeated readings. | The Southern Review:Dave Smith | No feeling, no memorable language. |
| Its rhythm, imagery and sound combined with perceiving the world in a unique and authentic way. | tnr: the new renaissance:Frank Finale | Its ordinariness of language and lack of imagination. |
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