Subscription Services

 

Published January 28, 2007, 12:00 AM

American life in poetry: Silent Music

While many of the poems we feature in this column are written in open forms, that’s not to say I don’t respect good writing done in traditional meter and rhyme. But a number of contemporary poets, knowing how a rigid attachment to form can take charge of the writing and drag the poet along behind, will choose, say, the traditional villanelle form, then relax its restraints through the use of broken rhythm and inexact rhymes. I’d guess that if I weren’t talking about it you might not notice, reading this poem by Floyd Skloot, that it’s a sonnet.

:The complete e-mail address or addresses to send the article to


: your name

: