Ricocheting and Reverberations

   Ricocheting and Reverberations

“A Poem of any length neither can be, nor ought to be, all poetry.”

          ~ Samuel Taylor Coleridge

The lazy ones all say, “I like this line.”

That keeps them from admitting that they don’t

Like all the others.  That is all just fine

But robs them.  What they mean, though, is, “I won’t

Take time and pains to figure out the play

Of words against each other all throughout

The poem, and how line and line can say

Far more together, and can have more clout,

When they are taken, bound like fasces sticks,

To make a bundled whole for striking on

The brain.  A poet multiplies his tricks

By juxtaposing them.  In chess a pawn

Is just a pawn but masters use them with

The queen.  The lines give more than just their pith.

Phillip Whidden