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The faults of a poetaster frequently include errors or lapses in their work's meter, badly rhyming words which jar rather than flow, oversentimentality, too much use of the
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is often used to refer to someone who produces work in verse with the implication that while technically able to make lines rhyme they have no real talent for poetry.
235:, although some of his poems are frequently anthologized and retain enduring popular appeal. "Trees" has been parodied innumerable times, including by
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Aiken, Conrad Potter. "Confectionery and Caviar: Edward Bliss Reed, John Cowper Powys, Joyce Kilmer, Theodosia
Garrison, William Carlos Williams" in
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uses the term to refer to a struggling narrator wracked with ambition to create beautiful poetry in a verse from "Inflammatory Writ":
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choice of subject matter. Although a mundane subject in the hands of some great poets can be raised to the level of art, such as
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Holliday, Robert Cortes. "Memoir", in Joyce Kilmer, edited by
Holliday (New York: Doran, 1918), I: 17–101.
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223:. Austin was frequently mocked during his career and is little read today. The American poet
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has implications of unwarranted pretensions to artistic value. The word was coined in
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have held ambiguous meanings depending on the commentator's opinion of a writer's
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In the sense that a poetaster is a pretended poet, John
Marston coined the term
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Ode on the Death of a
Favourite Cat, Drowned in a Tub of Gold Fishes
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ed. C. H. Herford, P. and E. Simpson, vol. 9 (Oxford, 1950) p. 533.
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for one who pretends to be a parasite or sycophant, in his play
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uses an adjectival form as an insult in his song "Uncut, Pure":
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has always been a negative appraisal of a poet's skills,
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Nash, Ogden. "Song of the Open Road" first published in
19:"Rhymester" redirects here. For the hip-hop group, see
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In that play the "poetaster" character is a satire on
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330:Well, I wrote it and I was not inflamed one bit.
351:Pardon the vainglory, but here's the Kane story
113:, one of Jonson's rivals in the Poetomachia or
333:Advice from the master derailed that disaster;
336:he said "Hand that pen over to me, poetaster"
191:Other poets often regarded as poetasters are
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281:. Unsourced material may be challenged and
301:Learn how and when to remove this message
215:. Austin, despite having been a British
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348:Your poetasterous style it plain bore me
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227:(1886–1918), known for his 1913 poem
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484:. Vol. 12 No. 8. (July 1951), 63.
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420:Oxford English Dictionary
374:Parasitaster, or The Fawn
193:William Topaz McGonagall
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320:The Milk-eyed Mender
275:improve this section
221:Alfred Lord Tennyson
160:and unintentionally
418:25 March 1521 (see
115:War of the Theatres
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469:Scepticisms
379:criticaster
201:Edgar Guest
182:Thomas Gray
495:Categories
447:Ben Jonson
402:References
243:Modern use
237:Ogden Nash
172:John Keats
94:Ben Jonson
414:Erasmus,
355:The band
313:Musician
262:does not
147:Versifier
139:versifier
131:rhymester
127:poetaster
105:Poetaster
82:poetaster
74:versifier
70:rhymester
31:Poetaster
431:Jonson,
391:Doggerel
385:See also
363:Variants
162:bathetic
68:), like
416:Letters
340:Rapper
283:removed
268:sources
229:"Trees"
90:Erasmus
482:Argosy
211:, and
151:Rhymer
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125:While
501:Poets
143:verse
121:Usage
86:Latin
78:poets
266:any
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