‘The Worst Poet Ever?’ (2016)

Image result for images of william topaz mcgonagall

Can bad art survive by its badness?

Well, William Topaz McGonagall’s has.

The Worst Poet Ever?

He was immovably convinced that he was Scotland’s greatest living poet, and one of the greatest of all time. He expected Queen Victoria to make him Poet Laureate. He actually turned up at the palace once to talk it over with her. The guards said she wasn’t in.

Oh, the power of delusion! It’s what makes Elizabeth Warren presidential timber, Greta Thunberg an eco-messiah, and Bruce Jenner a “woman.” As opposed to these, Mr. McGonagall’s delusion harmed no one at all.

The Worst Poet Ever?

Image result for images of william topaz mcgonagall

I learned of something new today: William Topaz McGonagall (1825-1902), widely acclaimed as the worst poet, ever, in the English language, and perhaps the worst poet in any language ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_McGonagall ).

Sample these few closing lines from his immortal poem about the Tay Bridge Disaster of 1879, about a railroad bridge that collapsed while a train was crossing it:

Had they [sections of the bridge] been supported on each side with buttresses,/ At least many sensible men confesses,/ For the stronger we our homes do build,/ The less chance we have of being killed.

McGonagall’s life would be a sad story, except he himself never took any notice at all of the universal condemnation of his verses; and although he died in poverty, he never seems to have lost his sense of self-importance or his vision of himself as one of Scotland’s all-time greatest poets.

His works remain in print today: there’s a kind of morbid fascination in reading them, and trying in vain to find a consistent meter, or a line that scans. Greater poets by far than McGonagall have been utterly forgotten; but his incredible works are still with us.

Just search his name on your computer, and you’ll find a number of nice websites devoted solely to the worst poet ever to butcher a line.