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Poetry's long history includes publishing some of the first work by some very important poets: T.S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Marianne Moore, Wallace Stevens, H.D. and William Carlos Williams, among others. Founded in 1912, it bills itself as "the oldest monthly devoted to verse in the English-speaking world." It's also one of the most difficult to get into -- it publishes under 1 percent of what's submitted. Art Beat asked a number of poets about their experiences being rejected and got a variety of responses. (For the record, the Poetry Foundation helps fund the PBS NewsHour.) "My history with Poetry magazine is unusual. The first time I submitted poems, I was turned down. The second time, I was enthusiastically accepted. What is unusual is that I waited 26 years before giving the editors a second chance to reject me. I was introduced to Poetry in high school when my father used to bring the magazine home to me from his office in downtown New York. I don't know why his office had a subscription. No one there read poetry, my father included, but he knew I had literary interests, so a copy found its way into my hands every month. The happy result was that I discovered in those pages for the first time the sounds of contemporary poetry. The only poets I had read up to that point were the ones assigned in English class, all of them dead males with long beards and three names. Until I discovered Poetry, I thought I would never become a real poet because I had only two names and was just beginning to shave. "Then, after reading the magazine throughout high school, I was foolish enough to put a few of my own poems in an envelope and send them off to Chicago. I was 18 years old when I submitted this first batch. I had no delusions of grandeur; I just had no idea of the inadequacy of my poems. Amazing as it seems to me now, a few weeks later I received from editor Henry Rago a personal letter several paragraphs long and full of encouragement -- not to send more poems, mind you, but to continue to write and read more poems before I submitted again. "Twenty-six years later, feeling better prepared, I submitted to the magazine a second batch of poems, which Joseph Parisi quickly accepted. I carried his letter with me for weeks. I could hardly believe it. I was being published in Poetry. I could die a happy forty-six-year-old poet. During his long tenure as editor, Parisi continued to be susceptible to my poems maybe because I always sent him what I considered to be my best work. He published me so frequently that I once thanked him for "serializing" my latest book. At the recent opening of the Poetry Foundation's new center, one of the staff handed me a printout of all of my appearances in the magazine: there were over 80 poems on the list. I like to tell younger poets that everyone is born with 300 bad poems in them. In my case, it took 26 years to write them out." |
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