Monday, May 7, 2012
http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/246
Here's another from that same website. Check out the box at the bottom.
http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/15528
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Questions or no Questions
Echo, echo, echo,
A future is coming
Echo, echo, echo,
Yet the past still
Echo, echo, echo,
I will not say it is boring
I will not say it is boring
Freedom of the future
Fixture of the past
A lamp that turns on
At the time before I sleep
Time before I heal
Future is coming
It may need all my strength
It may take a grain of mustard seed
Blue, green, yellow
No
The future is purple
The future is a mysterious haze
A never-ending cycle that happens
If it escapes our consciousness
If it disappears of our deep meaning
The future comes and always will be
As for the past
It has always been.
Though it may not be on
The lamp is still there
Its still in the small room
Surrounded by windows
Surrounded by doors
Never leaving that room
Always looking
Always changing
But if the future is day
And before I sleep is past
What is the night?
The time that I sleep
The time that has no consciousness
No meaning
Is it the time I am most conscious?
A time that has the most meaning?
Do we live life with our eyes closed
The present a time of sleep?
That seems incorrect
This metaphor is flawed
Or is it?
The times of the past fixed and present
Future never able to grasp
Never in touch
The present, dark and relaxing
Echo, echo, echo
OR
Echo, echo, echo,
A future is coming
Echo, echo, echo,
Yet the past still
Echo, echo, echo,
I will not say it is boring
I will not say it is boring
Freedom of the future
Fixture of the past
A lamp that turns on
At the time before I sleep
Time before I heal
Future is coming
It may need all my strength
It may take a grain of mustard seed
Blue, green, yellow
No
The future is purple
The future is a mysterious haze
A never-ending cycle that happens
If it escapes our consciousness
If it disappears of our deep meaning
The future comes and always will be
As for the past
It has always been.
Though it may not be on
The lamp is still there
Its still in the small room
Surrounded by windows
Surrounded by doors
Never leaving that room
Always looking
Always changing
But if the future is day
And before I sleep is past
What is the night?
The time that I sleep
The time that has no consciousness
No meaning
It is the time I am most conscious
A time that has the most meaning
We live life with our eyes closed
The present a time of sleep
That seems incorrect
This metaphor is flawed
Or is it?
The times of the past fixed and present
Future never able to grasp
Never in touch
The present, dark and relaxing
Echo, echo, echo
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Week 4 - Eric and Lily
Oliver claims that free verse is more accessible because it does not follow a strict meter. Do you find free verse to be more or less accessible than metered poetry? What about in terms of the potential laziness referred to in the above paragraph? Oliver references speech being lyrical and free verse poetry using many of the same techniques. What do you think effective public speakers have in common with good poets (particularly spoken word or slam poets)? On page 116 of A Poetry Handbook, the reader is told that poetry improves significantly when written in solitude. What are your thoughts on this? Do you think it could potentially add something to the poem if it is written with constant interruptions? Have you experimented with this on your own, and if so, what did you learn about your writing style and it's dependency on the presence of others?
On a side note, if you had to pick one, would you say that diction, tone, voice or rhythm were most important to a poem's strength?
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Week 3 (Riley and Claire)
Which type of poetry is “better” (We know this is an extremely subjective thing), ones that rhyme (50-55ish) or free verse where the content is the center of the piece, not so much the words.
“The most important point in the line is the line is the end of the line. The second most important point is the beginning of it.” (Pg 52) Do you agree with this idea? Are their some cases where this is reversed?
Myers: On page 92, he talks about "Thematic Shapes of Poems". How do you think shaping a poem makes it better? Why do you think that poets use thematic shapes?
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Kings And Rhiannan
Monday, January 9, 2012
Welcome!
The goal is to develop a conversation about the technical and emotional elements of writing poems and where those intersect, overlap, influence one another. A short, thoughtful response to the pointwill be more useful than a ramble that doesn't really get ius anywhere.