15 Poems
6: Write a No-Sentence Poem | #8: Tell a Story |
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Prose writers shouldn't have all the fun of storytelling. Sure, essays, short stories, and novels are where we expect to find stories, but poems also can tell stories effectively. From the earliest epics, right up to the present day, people have built poems from stories--sometimes fictional, sometimes true.Gary Snyder's "Hay for the Horses" is a poem that tells a story, as are Robert Frost's "Out, Out--" and William Wordsworth's "Strange Fits of Passion I Have Known." Besides presenting vivid incidents, settings, and characters, stories can provide a sense of structure and purpose. To get started on a story poem, begin by quickly writing down a sequence of events from beginning to end. Then add some details, some characters, some tension, some suspense. For more storytelling suggestions, see Writing a Story in Paradigm Online Writing Assistant. For this poem, try one of the following:
Whichever of the above options you choose, keep the poem short, compressed, to the point--no more than 24 lines as an absolute maximum. You may want to write this out first as prose, then add line breaks and stanza breaks when you complete your first draft. |
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