"California supermarket" and "ridiculous silly" Alan Ginsberg's poem "California supermarket" and Lawrence Filling's poem "constant adventure adventure" describe a struggle for finding beauty and self-esteem. When Alain Ginzberg got lost in the market and tried to find inspiration from Walt Whitman frantically, Lawrence Ferlingin was not only brave, but also an image of the poet who desperately tried to balance on the high line Ridiculous, there is a danger of death. Both poems contain the struggle of their poets to find the fear of meaning and failure.
Lawrence Ferlinghetti always encourages the absurd risk of expressing the credibility of creative writing. Regardless of whether it is writing poetry or danger, it summarizes the risk of any creative behavior in line 33. The outcome of these two situations will be different, but in the end they will total and fail, poetry and human survival will fail. Because of fear of failure, a lot of people are retreating for creative writing. This is a very good poem for the simplicity of writing poetry. It clarifies my idea and corrects my thoughts. Rather than just singing rhymes rhymes, writing poetry and complex and dangerous behavior.
Poetry by Lawrence Ferlinghetti is always in danger of absurdity. This poem is an expanded metaphor that compares poetry with ready-made dangerous acrobatics. It has a very original layout and a complex structure. Although this poem is not so long, it is accurate and clear, and it is achieved by using a lot of images and vocabulary. This is a tough fact of poetry creation, the real situation of all creative writing. Poetry is about the similarities between poet and acrobat. When I say "I like poets and are acrobatists", I can notice this at the beginning in line 6. This is, of course, the subject of this poem. However, another more subtle theme of this poem is the survival or death of this verse compared to the life and death of acrobatics. Another acrobat of poetry and acrobatics
The third poet, Lawrence Felin Getti, wrote "always risking" the same subject as his poem "McLeish and Moore", but it is different on that subject. In this poem, Ferlinghetti reminds me of the image of a very brilliant poet like a tightrope. Ferlinghetti explains how a poet as an acrobat passes through delicate exquisite footwork and ballet-like posture. These "clever skills" are similar to the ability of a poet to pick perfect perceptual words. The ridiculous risk of representing a poet is similar to the risk of falling down by an acrobat with a tightrope. The "tight truth" seen in the poet's experience must be well-balanced, otherwise absurd will be essential. Then Ferlinghetti made a subtle irony of the relationship between the poet and the verse. The acrobatic poet in "Continuous Adventure" has performed "virtual progress" on the concept of transcendental beauty. The tightrope walk is always stretched in the horizontal direction