First thread of the new forum!!
Let's begin with some discussion surrounding a quote from Edgar Allen Poe's The Philosophy of Composition (which you can read for free at the link):
Now I designate Beauty as the province of the poem.
For Poe, beauty is the one true province or function of poetry, the genre most able to inspire “intense and pure elevation of the soul.”
I have to admit, I don’t know how he defined beauty. I think even ugly truths can be beautiful simply because they are true.
(Conversely, he saw “the excitement of the heart” as best attained through prose writing.)
Was Poe right? If so, wherein lies the beauty in poetry?
Let's begin with some discussion surrounding a quote from Edgar Allen Poe's The Philosophy of Composition (which you can read for free at the link):
Now I designate Beauty as the province of the poem.
For Poe, beauty is the one true province or function of poetry, the genre most able to inspire “intense and pure elevation of the soul.”
I have to admit, I don’t know how he defined beauty. I think even ugly truths can be beautiful simply because they are true.
(Conversely, he saw “the excitement of the heart” as best attained through prose writing.)
Was Poe right? If so, wherein lies the beauty in poetry?