Tag: poems

  • “Poems”, 04-05-2025

    Oh, my fellow poet!
    No poem is better,
    No poem is worse,
    For there is,
    Neither a right way,
    Nor a wrong way,
    To write a poem.
    It’s the language,
    Few can write,
    Many can understand.
    Poems can be better,
    Poems can be worse,
    But there’s just,
    The reader’s understanding,
    For there is,
    Neither a right way,
    Nor a wrong way,
    To read a poem!
    — TUSW

    Theme:

    This piece written by TUSW on the 4th day of May, 2025 talks about perception of poems.

    Background:

    The poet (TUSW) has written this piece in response to the comment from another poet that TUSW’s poems were better than her’s.

    Explanation:

    Oh, my fellow poet!

    This opening introduces the two characters of the poem, the poet (TUSW) and another poet.

    No poem is better,
    No poem is worse,

    These two lines set the narrative on which the poem is based on. The poet states that in poetry there’s nothing such as a poem being better or worse than another.

    For there is,
    Neither a right way,
    Nor a wrong way,
    To write a poem.

    These lines explain why the poet says the lines before these. In these lines, the poet says that there isn’t a specific right way or a wrong way to write a poem, in essence, saying a poem can be written in any way.

    It's the language,
    Few can write,
    Many can understand.

    In these lines, the poet compares poetry to a language. He also states that while only few can write poems, many can understand them.

    Poems can be better,
    Poems can be worse,
    But there's just,
    The reader's understanding,

    These lines contradict the idea the poet establishes at the start – that poems cannot be better or worse – creating a paradox. The contradiction is intentional: while the poet admits that poems can seem better or worse, that judgment depends entirely on the reader. In other words, the “quality” of a poem isn’t absolute; it’s shaped by the reader’s own understanding and perspective.

    For there is,
    Neither a right way,
    Nor a wrong way,
    To read a poem!

    These lines repeat the earlier structure, but the emphasis shifts. The first set talks about writing a poem, while this one applies the same idea to reading a poem. The repetition highlights how both acts – writing and reading – share the same idea: no fixed right way, no fixed wrong way.

    Critical Analysis:

    Language: Simple

    Structure: Single Stanza

    Rhyme Scheme: none

    Poetic Devices: Poetic devices like paradox have been effectively used to put across the message

    Message: Poetry has no fixed rules and no poem is better or worse – it all depends on the understanding of the reader