Poetaster (), like rhymester or versifier, is a derogatory term applied to bad or inferior Poet. Specifically, poetaster has implications of unwarranted pretensions to artistic value. The word was coined in Latin by Erasmus in 1521.Erasmus, Letters 25 March 1521 (see Oxford English Dictionary s.v. "Poetaster"). It was first used in English by Ben Jonson in his 1600 play Cynthia's Revels;Jonson, Cynthia's Revels act 2 scene 4. immediately afterwards Jonson chose it as the title of his 1601 play Poetaster. In that play the "poetaster" character is a satire on John Marston, one of Jonson's rivals in the Poetomachia or War of the Theatres. Ben Jonson ed. C. H. Herford, P. and E. Simpson, vol. 9 (Oxford, 1950) p. 533.
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 pathetic fallacy and unintentionally Bathos 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 On First Looking into Chapman's Homer by John Keats or by Thomas Gray, others merely produce bizarre poems on bizarre subjects, an example being James McIntyre, who wrote mainly of cheese.
Other poets often regarded as poetasters are William Topaz McGonagall, Julia A. Moore, Edgar Guest, J. Gordon Coogler, Dmitry Khvostov, and Alfred Austin. Austin, despite having been a British poet laureate, is nevertheless regarded as greatly inferior to his predecessor, Alfred Lord Tennyson. Austin was frequently mocked during his career and is little read today. The American poet Joyce Kilmer (1886–1918), known for his 1913 poem "Trees", is often criticized for his overly sentimental and traditional verse written at the dawn of Modernist poetry, although some of his poems are frequently anthologized and retain enduring popular appeal.Holliday, Robert Cortes. "Memoir", in Joyce Kilmer, edited by Holliday (New York: Doran, 1918), I: 17–101.Aiken, Conrad Potter. "Confectionery and Caviar: Edward Bliss Reed, John Cowper Powys, Joyce Kilmer, Theodosia Garrison, William Carlos Williams" in Scepticisms. (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1919), 178–86. "Trees" has been parodied innumerable times, including by Ogden Nash.Nash, Ogden. "Song of the Open Road" first published in Argosy. Vol. 12 No. 8. (July 1951), 63.
Rapper Big Daddy Kane uses an adjectival form as an insult in his song "Uncut, Pure":
The band Miracle Fortress has a song entitled "Poetaster".
In , Lee Ross refers to political influencer Cy Draven as an "opportunistic poetaster".
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