Advice To a Young Poet by Kendel Hippolyte What is poetry which does not save nations or people? —Czesław Milosz Ask the question. Not once but forty-nine times. And, perhaps at the fiftieth, you will make an answer. Or perhaps not. Then ask it again. This time till seventy times seven. Ask as you open the door of every book of poems that you enter. Ask it of every poem, regardless of how beautiful, that whispers: “Lie with me.” Do not spare your newborn. If the first cry, first line is not a wailing for an answer, abandon it. As for the stillborn, turn the next blank white sheet over, shroud it. Ask the clamouring procession of all the poems of the ages – each measured, white-haired epic, every flouncing free verse debutante – to state their names, where they have come from and what their business is with you. You live in the caesura of our times, the sound of nations, persons, breaking around you. If poetry can only save itself, then who will hear it after it has fled from the nations and the people that it could not save even a remnant of for a remembering?
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