After President Biden’s farewell debate, I had a problem. It was evident that Donald Trump would win. I fantasised that he would offer me the post of Poet Laureate, and I wondered if I would accept. After all, Washington D.C. is hot and muggy, and it is across the country from my home in Los Angeles.
On the other hand, it would be a signal honour to be tapped; and, more importantly, a chance to partially fulfil a debt not only to my country, but to Mr Trump and those who’ve stood up in its defence.
I was reminded of the story of the Shadchan, the traditionally Jewish matchmaker. He comes to the Goldbergs’ house and asks if they would entertain an offer in marriage of their son, Shmuel, from Princess Margaret of Great Britain. The Goldbergs go into conference. “Yes, she is not Jewish, but on the other hand, her family is quite religious; yes, she is older than he, but they tend to live long…” And so on.
Eventually, they come back to the Shadchan and announce: “Yes, we would entertain an offer for our Shmuel from Princess Margaret.”
“Great,” the Shadchan says, “my job is half done.”
Now, after Mr Biden was deposed, I was saddened by a third alternative: that Mr Trump would be defeated, and I would be deprived of his proposition.
What does a Poet Laureate do? I don’t know, but I suspect the job might entail a semantically supportable fulfilment of its title: to sing the country’s praises, or present the work of those who have. And since it would be unbecoming to flog my own works from an official pedestal, I’d have to confine myself to endorsing the working of others.
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SubscribeIs this man drunk?
Boring
Probably
Drunk on religion.
I nominate Amanda M. Ros as poet laureate (ok, she’s dead and she was Irish, but this is a Mamet article so we’re not constrained by reality).
Yesterday in Unherd, Andrew Doyle even provided this excerpt of her poetic oeuvre:
“On visiting Westminster Abbey”:
Now if that doesn’t bestir that slumbering, portentous beast, thy everlasting soul, to a paean-filled, rapturous awakening, then lock me in a basement and call me Biden.
And Barry Humphries for Australian poet laureate-
“I was down by Bondi Pier
Drinkin’ tubes of ice cold beer
with a bucket full of prawns upon my knee.
Swallowed the last prawn,
Had a technicolour yawn,
And chundered in the old Pacific Sea”.
What a joy he was!
Except that I’m fairly sure that Bondi Beach doesn’t *have* a pier.
Thanks for the levity, I needed it today.
We need more of it.
You wasted in whatever job you currently do!
Nicely irreverent.
Although David Mamet is a great writer, I’d greatly prefer it if Trump made Joseph S. Salemi the next poet laureate. (If one hasn’t read his poetry or criticisms of poetry, especially his criticisms of modern poetry, then spend some time checking that all out; The Society of Classical Poets is a good place to start.)
Presidents don’t select U.S. Poet Laureates, the Librarian of Congress does. Otherwise Trump would probably select an author who’s an even more abject apologist for him than Mamet has become.
Being Trump, that is what he would do. At least he would be choosing someone with the moral courage to stand against a ravenous mob.
Far from certain. He’s at least as likely to incite a ravenous mob as to stand against one or elevate anyone who would. He’s an egomaniac and nihilist passing with many of his fans for a courageous and virtuous leader. Donnie Bone Spurs.
I doubt that Trump has ever read poetry.
Agreed. He scarcely reads real books at all.
He finds ‘Sandburg, Emerson, Whitman, and so on… icky’ yet wants to be taken seriously as a writer. No words.
And is apparently ingnorant of the fact that Huddie Ledbetter and Leadbelly (not “Lead Belly”) are the same person!
“ignorant” — pedant’s overenthusiasm!
I believe when future generations come to curate the poetic muse of the late 20th century, it is the best song lyrics that will stand the test of time much more than the ‘poetry’ of the era. There are currently more than one hundred English language poetry magazines. The most established are accorded a respect in literary circles that seems to inoculate them from worrying about the indifference of the wider educated public. Many of the smaller ones, with a readership perhaps approaching zero, nevertheless take themselves very seriously and exult in their esoteric au courant judgements about what makes a great poem. https://grahamcunningham.substack.com/p/imagine-theres-no-muzak
I agree. Nothing will ever top the poetic and beautiful truth revealed to us in 1992 by 2Unlimited. In their own words:
No no
No no no no
No no no no
No no there’s no limits.
Reminiscent of Baldrick’s lyric poem about WWI: “Boom boom, boom boom. Boom boom boom” (etc.)
I thought Huddie Leadbetter *was* Lead Belly…
Exactly. Someone ought to have caught that.
While not without bitter, negative power, much of Mamet’s work is drivel. My favorite playwrights are William Shakespeare and the Bard of Avon.
I prefer the Swan of Avon to the other two.
Yes, you were ahead of me in pointing this out.
I wrote a poem in Mamet’s honour.
Ode to Pride
Pride strikes the strongest hardest / In God’s eyes the noble recede / The purest Pharisee falls to his knees / Where, eye to eye, with whores / He’s forced to watch them mired in their lustful work / Knowing he is not one inch higher.
Pride’s hunger, never sated. / Achievements plated to the ceiling / All consumed and leave us with thirst for one more try / A belly never full, a gullet never dry.
It makes you want that precious treasure / The promise of a pleasure that no yacht, no mansions, no crown or hoard / Can match this one inflection: / to confound your own gold-plated reflection / with the very face of Christ our Lord.
The prideful need no idle hours, slouching, unshowered, watching Netflix’s endless reel / Pride’s call to action is the very power / the very trick that preens and cleans and fills with zeal.
With wrath it finds its closest ally / Exploding, smoldering, scornful angry, sour. / Yet Pride burns on and on, for hours. / Long after the fire dies, still it holds the cold dagger of revenge and cuts to shreds all hope of forgiveness.
Pride is the monster, green-eyed / Yet mocks not the meat of others it ingests / But feeds upon its own, fetted flesh.
Pride, deadliest of the seven, / blocks every self-made path to heaven. / God’s little five-letter-word / Translated means “there is no other road devised / But faith alone in Jesus Christ”
Was it necessary to sneer at America’s poetry in the aggregate in order to celebrate its Blues Tradition?
I’m actually surprised and a bit relieved to hear that Mr. Mamet openly likes anything, though only within the overall tapestry of sadness he perceives life to be. What poets does he like, American or otherwise? Whitman eschewed rhyme but there is strong rhythm and musicality in much of it. At its best, Whitman’s emotional rawness and willingness to look upon every soul—including prostitutes, lunatics, and outcasts, slaves and slavemasters alike—and claim kinship, has enduring power. And some of it is drivel, granted. It is a huge mixed bag, not mere garbage.
The Blues also contain notes of celebration and prayer. They are not an uninterrupted complaint, nor a bitter lament with no aspirational upside. They tend not to be religious in the institutional sense, but they often sing with a spirit that is not starved of hope. Where’s your musicality Mamet?
We find no hard evidence of a life or land of milk and honey only—that wouldn’t even make sense or keep us entertained—but only the most jaded palate tastes nothing but bitterness.
Beautifully said.
Thanks. I’m glad at least some of my comments get a response other than “boo!”.
David Mamet does a regular cartoon for Bari Weiss’ Free Press. They are amusing, fantastic even. He should be our National Cartoonist Laureate.
He’s become cartoonish himself. National Curmudgeon maybe. But his doomsaying and appropriation of God’s Judgment takes a lot of the fun out of it.
The commenters on here need to lighten up, Mamet is funny, enjoy the comic relief. Goodness knows there’s so little of it these days.
I think his comedy is mostly unintentional these days. Mamet needs to lighten up more than almost anyone.
Well, you are also a commenter so let’s what you’ve got.
I don’t read him as comic, I read him as unpleasant and smug.
And unless he’s pretending for would-be comic purposes, he should know what a poet laureate does, and that the US one isn’t appointed by the President.
Also, I’m fairly sure that people will be reading Frost long after third-rate rubbish like “Oleanna” and “Glengarry Glen Ross” has been forgotten.
Mamet hasn’t read any of our technically competent philosophically profound poets born after 1901,? Stevens, Bishop, Lowell, Ammons, Snyder, Jeffers, Levine, Hitrshfeld, Merwin, Hall, Oliver, Glueck and so many more? David, look up last ten Poets who were LC national poets.
I dont love them all but they all know what they’re doing
Read any?
The Shakespeare sonnets had rhyme, imagery, irony and paradox.
His plays contain vast tables loaded with the greatest poetry. Most of the dramatic poetry didn’ t rhyme.
Do you know much about poetry, American or other? Emersons fame rests on his essays, yet youvset him up as a failed poet red herring. Never heard of his contemporary,, Emily Dickinson?
Bet the Psalms dont meet your test either. Of course, you dont coherently present a standard to weight a speck of fairy dust.
Pretty sure he was keeping it American. So Shakespeare and psalmist need not apply. Emerson and Whitman are more prominent in American history than all the rest. (won’t talk to Emerson as essayist, though)
What…no Joni Mitchell?!
Canadian
Ooh, yes . Forgot that. Leonard Cohen too I guess.
The joke was good.
How about Brendan Behan’s differentiating poetry and prose?
There was a young fellow named Rollocks
Who worked for Ferrier Pollocks
As he walked on the strand
with a girl by the hand
The water came up to his… ankles
“That” declared Behan “is prose. But if the tide had been in, it would have been poetry”.
I was just thinking about how inane the lyrics to some of my favourite songs actually are. They’re really great songs to me but then…
Ventura Highway ”
‘Cause the free wind is blowin’ through your hair
And the days surround your daylight there
Seasons crying, no despair
Alligator lizards in the air, in the air”
‘Nuff said really.
(reaches for another pint of prosecco )
I worry that any poetry written by the Trump Poet Apprentice would be branded as hate speech and unsafe and misinformation.
And I dare say the FBI would be showing up at his door.
Are you sure you want the job, David Mamet?
Poet Apprentice…that’s pretty good. I doubt any versifying contestant could praise him lavishly enough to avoid hearing “you’re fired!” for long.
I nominate Dana Gioia for Poet Laurate. And David Mamet for Curmudgeon Laureate (I love him).
Is David Mamet OK?
Please keep writing what you think David Mamet. And I will keep reading and enjoying every poetic phrase.
Huddie Ledbetter and Lead Belly are one and the same person.
The best living American poet is of course Bob Zisk
http://www.thehypertexts.com/Bob%20Zisk%20Poet%20Poetry%20Picture%20Bio.htm
Also, Mamet’s omission of Wallace Stevens is simply unforgiveable.
Huddie Ledbetter/Lead Belly mentioned twice in his short list!