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Poetry by Argo Spier

( Taken from web journals and revised by Suma. V.S.)
Poetry generally involves two roles, readers and writers.
There is a symbiotic relationship between the roles, and with
only one, poetry, simply does not happen. The locality, in
time-continuum existence, and transcendence of meaning in poetry
depend on both these two elements. Both are essential
components. Poetry does not know causes and effects; it is
something that only comes into being when it is
written-AND-read. The reader's function, in the assembling of
poetry, is to unlock the poem, the writer has preordained and
free it into the source-pool of the Literature Generalize, the
vast body of collective literature. When a poem is not read, it
stays as what it was, a germ that infected the brain of the
writer. Unread writers (unwritten readers) are of a leprous
kind, infected by deadly incubations and therefore dangerous.
So, a good poet earns his prestige, not through the number of
his medals, prizes and honoraries, but by reading and being read
many many times. However, there is still a devil that exists in
the detail of the reader/writer relationship that produces
egocentricity. A statement such as “‘He’ is a reader’ when made
is assumed as the reader is masculine. The he is a he. Is
‘he/she’ in connection with reader not a more suitable
description for a reader? Can a
‘she’
not read a poem? The immediate answer to this is no! No, because
it is neither a he nor a she that is conceived in the mind of a
reader when he reads ‘he’ or ‘he/she’. The meaning he gives to a
‘he’ or a ‘she’ is different. When the writer employs the word
she, in the reader’s (writer’s?) perception, the semantic
categorization is ‘I or me’ and immediate proof of his or her
involvement and role in making the poetry happen. For the reader
there is no such thing as ‘he or she’. In his/her mind the value
of ‘he’ is always egocentrically categorized. One does not have
this in prose. It only occurs in poetry. Even if the ‘he’ was
categorically stated and precisely described as being a male
Homo Sapiens Generalis, with all the usual male characteristics,
beard, genitalia, etc., there is nothing in the brain that
connects the ‘she’ with femininity and the ‘he’ with
masculinity. It connects ‘he/she’ with the being. The answer is
simple: 'Poems aren't poems at all, they are always something
and someone else!'

The poetry reader always places himself as the protagonist,
while the prose reader seldom does. This is a phenomenon that
must convey something about the strangeness of poetry. The
reader enjoys a personal reaction and therefore creates from the
time of reading, an individual instance of the poem’s entity. It
is empirical that a poem cannot have no readers, for the writer
automatically acts as her own reader.
Ultimately, it is all in the hands of the poet that is unveiled
by a poem. Or to put it another way: Is it the poet that’s found
in the poem or the poem that makes the poet?
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