written and posted by members of Lancashire Dead Good Poets' Society

Friday 13 April 2012

Micro v Macro


For me, writing is both micro and macro. I believe the process of writing is to condense and intensify universal truths and ideas into a form which is more potent to the reader. Poetry is concise, and yet encompasses far more in such few words than other types of text. One of my favourite poets is Sylvia Plath.These first lines from her poem Morning Song encompass the beginnings of life to me beautifully and evocatively, and bring forth a rush of emotions from my experiences of new motherhood.

Love set you going like a fat gold watch.

The midwife slapped your footsoles, and your bald cry

Took its place among the elements.



In these three lines the author has spoke the micro, the commonplace occurrence of a new child being born in a minimum of words and yet it is also the macro. It speaks to mothers everywhere, and represents the beginning of the life cycle. For me, poetry combines the micro and the macro in the most logical way. I hate making life so binary, when it very rarely is in reality.

And I never mentioned Little and Large once so here's a photo for you.


3 comments:

Ashley Lister said...

Excellent post.

You hate making life binary? That makes 10 of us :-)

Ash

Anonymous said...

If Sylvia Plath wrote about slapping babies today she'd be incarcerated for child abuse.
I still don't understand micro (thought it was a car) and macro (which I know I can disable on word.

Damp incendiary device said...

Lindsay, you captured my thoughts on the relationship between the minuscule and the universal perfectly. Great snippet of poetry too :)