TAC | What I found upon this search was, and is, nothing less than an
embarrassment to our country. A caricature of a parody, unworthy of the
name of poetry, rising not even to the level of propaganda.
But what made it so bad?
First of all, its emptiness. Its platitudes. The fact that, if
presented in prose form and unburdened of its opportunistic rhymes, it
might be mistaken for a New York Times op-ed. There appears to
be a belief among slam poets that this quasi-rap, pseudo-freestyle,
lilting rhythm in which the poems are performed (which spans the entire
genre without alteration) is an acceptable substitute for substance.
That vacuous wordplay fills the shoes of wit. “What just is,” the poet
explains in the opening stanza, “isn’t always justice.” The phrase, of
course, means nothing. But because the punniness is clever (is it even
that?), it passes muster, and ascends to the level of great,
praiseworthy artistic achievement in the eyes of our elites.
Gorman’s
poem also seems to lift a line, practically verbatim except to include a
rhyme, from the recent Broadway hit “Hamilton.” What’s more, that line
(“Scripture tells us to envision that everyone shall sit under their own
vine and fig tree, and no one shall make them afraid”) is itself a
reference to George Washington’s Farewell Address, which is itself a
reference to Scripture (Micah 4:4, Kings 4:25, Zechariah 3:10). The
irony of the fact that, at an inaugural recitation for the oldest ever
American president, more advanced in years than all his living
predecessors, reference is made to our first president’s Farewell
Address, in which he wistfully anticipates his restful retirement, is
too much to bear. In fact, it demonstrates the poet’s unfamiliarity with
her material, and thus smacks more of plagiarism than of reverential
reference (although I’m sure she reveres Lin-Manuel Miranda very much).
Relatedly,
the poem displays a perverse kind of Burkeanism. A contract between the
dead, the living, and the unborn is similarly imagined as the basis of
our social project: “Because being American is more than a pride we
inherit; it’s the past we step into and how we repair it”; “We will not
be turned around or interrupted by intimidation, because we know our
inaction and inertia will be the inheritance of the next generation.”
But instead of the benevolent passage of the torch from the old to the
young, this poem imagines the promise of that contract to be the
severance of ourselves from our collective past, either by the forward
march of progress or, if that fails, by the revision of the historical
narrative itself.
This actually bodes very well for conservatives
in the long run. As a member of the same generation as Ms. Gorman, I can
say that this poem truly embodies the Millennial and Gen-Z left. That
cunning rhetoric, no matter how sophistic, is all it takes to convince.
That their sense of an artistic—or any—tradition stretches back only as
far as their memory of the latest trends in the pop anti-culture. And
that their political mission amounts, simply, to a total dissociation
from and dissolution of the bonds of our national past. That mission,
like Gorman’s poem, is as self-defeating as it is empty.