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In Defence of Texters

by Peter Goulding

    Among the drivel that holds sway
    Upon the radio today,
    I heard a learnéd poet moan
    That this new-fangled mobile phone
    Would spell the death of English Lit.
    By subtly replacing it.
    For this new language he called ‘Text,’
    About which he was roundly vexed,
    Would render spelling out of date
    With acronyms that just create
    Phonetic words devoid of vowels,
    Which chill all literary bowels.
    And thus this word upon the street
    Would render grammar obsolete,
    With adverbs and subjunctive clauses
    Lost to modernistic causes.
    I know this poet and his verse,
    And sadly know of little worse
    Existing now in prose or rhyme
    Within the pages of our time.
    His references are so obtuse
    And syntax so supremely loose
    That very few can understand
    Each Latin, Greek or Persian strand
    That emanates at will from his
    Well-rounded nether orifice.
    Dismissive of both style and form,
    So far from the poetic norm
    His verses are, that if one chose,
    They could be written down as prose.
    For e’en the poet laureate
    Should manage to communicate
    With prince or pauper, stranger, friend,
    In language they can comprehend.
    And spirit quickly disappears
    When writing solely for one’s peers,
    Elitest nonsense, masked as style,
    Delivered in a breathless guile,
    That fools the meek poetic heart
    To thinking he is hearing art.
    And it is an uncommon truth
    That our maligned, phone-texting youth
    Are far more versed in every way
    At reaching out through words today.
    Though their epistles may be brief,
    It brings an old man some relief
    To see that they have found a cure
    For television’s evil lure,
    And though frustrated parents groan,
    The ever-present mobile phone,
    Ideal for communication,
    Can’t be used in isolation.
    Instead of being cooped up at home,
    Their profiles are allowed to roam
    Throughout the ether, interact,
    “Poeticise” to be exact.
    For poetry, to be precise
    Is language chosen and concise,
    And though the spelling may not be
    That found in any diction’ry,
    At least the reader knows what means
    The writing on those tiny screens,
    As very few pubescent writers
    Reference Zeus or Heraclitus.
    Androgynous and under-sexed,
    They’re learning well the joy of text.
    Elitist poet, hold thy tongue
    And learn a little from the young!

     

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