Friday, June 26, 2015

Different

                  Different

Not to say what everyone else is saying
not to believe what everyone else believed
not to do what everybody did,
then to refute what everyone else was saying
then to disprove what everyone else believed
then to deprecate what everybody did,

was his way to come by understanding

how everyone else was saying the same as he was saying
believing what he believed
and did what doing.

-- Clere Parsons --(1908-1931)
from A Poem a Day
edited by Karen McCosker and Nicholas Albery



I had never heard of him until I encountered this poem listed in the above mentioned volume.  While at Oxford, he edited the 1928 edition of Oxford Poetry and formed a group of poets that included Stephen Spender, Lewis MacNeice and several others.

I found the poem intriguing as it seems to suggest a strange intellectual journey from trying to be different to understanding that one really wasn't. I'm going to do a search to see if I can find any more of his poems on-line. 



A late thought--arriving some time after this was posted.  Could these three stages be considered levels of development which happens to many, if not to most people?


1.  Children growing up frequently demonstrate their individuality by taking a stand that is the opposite of everything their parents and other old folks accept and believe in.

Not to say what everyone else is saying
not to believe what everyone else believed
not to do what everybody did,



 2. As they grow and mature, they begin to come up with reasons for their opposition, reasons that support their positions and which go beyond mere opposition to the status quo. 

 then to refute what everyone else was saying
then to disprove what everyone else believed
then to deprecate what everybody did,



 3.  Then as they age and gain more experience of the world, they begin to change or modify their positions and finally find themselves as holding ideas which are common to many.  After all, there are only a limited number of positions that can be held on various issues:  completely for, partially for, partially against, completely against, and indifferent.



was his way to come by understanding

how everyone else was saying the same as he was saying
believing what he believed
and did what doing.



What do you think?

4 comments:

  1. The syntax of the final line throws me. I'm confused.

    ReplyDelete
  2. R.T.,
    I think the last line should read this way:

    "And did what (he was) doing."

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  3. And there is no such thing as a nonconforming individual? Humans -- like nature -- abhor vacuums? Independence and originality are myths? But I ramble incoherently.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. R.T.,

      A thought: perhaps the three stages are levels of maturity? I just added a bit to the post.

      Delete