While those are all impressively bad, I'm not sure they're quite what I'm looking for here, plus I don't know if I want to just straight up steal a poem.
This is the assignment I think I mentioned once, I'm writing a fictional letter to Thomas More by a guy who found his own island that's the exact opposite of Utopia. One of the things the guy praises is that their art is unfettered by rules and conventions (because they're so free and individualistic) but since I'm not actually arguing that this alternate Utopia is actually a place you'd want to live, I want to make the poem subvert his argument with its badness.
So a really ridiculous purple poem is fun, but I'm looking more for something in the Tenderbuttonsphere but violently against any kind of prosody or rhythm. Jarring, stilted, nonsensical, unreadable gibberish.
Yeah, Ros and McGonagall were both writing around the turn of the 20th century, when you at least had to
pretend to respect rhyme and meter.
but these days
it seems that bad poets are content
to just put any old words down
and if they are divided into lines
its a poem
theres also a surfeit of fake poets
who think they are t s eliot and insert
pointless allusions and turns of phrase and
think they can get
away with it when in fact
they just look like pretentious morons
i know this because i too wrote
poems like this when i was fifteen
and consumed by
angst and used the poetic art
or lack thereof to express
my feelings of faux despair