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The title of Czesław Miłosz’s “Ars Poetica?” refers to a meditation on the nature of poetry. Ars poetica is Latin for “the art of poetry,” a poem that acts as the poet’s treatise, their own personal definition of poetry.
Before “Ars Poetica?” even begins, the speaker undercuts their forthcoming reflections. They conclude the title with a question mark. This makes the reader question: Is the poem that follows an ars poetica, or even a poem? Or is it something else? Is the ars poetica final or is it merely a passing thought? By framing the poem as a question, the speaker has already expressed opinions on poetry; the openness and instability of questioning is a crucial part of the speaker’s poetics.
The starting point for “Ars Poetica?” is the aspiration “to a more spacious form / that would be free from the claims of poetry or prose” (Lines 1, 2). The question mark in the title has already proved important. What kind of poetics does the speaker espouse if they long for a form of writing that would exceed poetry’s limits? This longing illustrates the features which the speaker considers most essential to poetry. The speaker seeks a writing that would “let us understand each other” (Line 3), a writing defined by clear communication.
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