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This week I've been re-reading
Leonard Cohen's poetry.
Re-listening to interviews.
In one, he says his first books
were celebrated by reviewers,
given awards, people came to his readings,
so he had the youthful audacity to think
he could make a living out of writing.
Meagre sales soon dispelled that idea,
so he ran down to Nashville
to try to make it writing country songs -
bourgeois Jewish boy from Montreal.
What is it with messianic poets
who think they can defy the laws of nature,
exist in this world as if gravity
were just a state of mind?
Then I hear about Rupi Kaur.
Canadian poet like Cohen.
Women seem to adore her too. Otherwise,
she's not much like him.
For one thing, she's sold way more poetry books
by the age of 30 than he ever did
in his entire life. Millions and millions I hear.
They're NYTimes bestsellers.
She makes good money on her poetry.
Amassed a huge following through Instagram.
Her TV Special was on Amazon Prime Video.
It's like she's cracked some Peter Pan code
that taught her how to fly,
the alchemy of turning sadness into cash -
it's a dream, she's said.
In his 70s, after his manager
stole all his money while he was living
the monastic life of a Buddhist,
Leonard was asked about the way he suffers.
He said, with people dying and starving
all over the world every day, it's hard
to take one's own traumas too seriously.
I think that was his first mistake.
Everyone takes every smidgen of their suffering
so seriously nowadays. His second,
was an inability to think cheerful thoughts.
His short pithy rhymers I think
could've worked well on Instagram.
He might have been the Rupi Kaur
of his generation.