Apocalyptic beliefs have been around for a long time.
Consider England’s Doomsday Book. Commissioned by William the Conqueror for tax
purposes, many people of the time thought the end of the world would occur when
the book was completed. Isaac Newton (widely considered the world’s greatest
physicist) spent a lot of time searching the Bible for clues to the “end date”
(which he calculated as 2060). The funniest end of the world story comes from
Leeds, England in 1806 when a hen began laying eggs on which the words “Christ
is coming” appeared. This convinced many people that the end of the world was
near until a sensible local person actually watched the hen lay an egg and it
became clear that a silly hoax had been “hatched.”
Yes, you guessed it, this week’s prompt is to write poems about the end of the world. There’s just one rule: poems must be fourteen lines long (or less) and must contain at least one image that will amaze your readers. Work hard to make your poem unique—make your readers a little uneasy or fidgety—find ways to surprise even yourself.
Suggestions:
1. Write a poem about the failure
of the world to end on 12-21-12.
2. Write a biblically referenced
poem about the end of the world.
3. Write a reflection or
meditation about the world’s end.
4. Write a poem about a time when
it seemed your world was ending. Remember that simply telling a story doesn’t
make a poem. A good example for this is the old 1963 Skeeter Davis song “The End of the
World?” Click here to listen.
5. Write a response to the final
stanza of T. S. Eliot’s “The Hollow Men” (perhaps his most often-quoted lines).
“This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper.”
6. Write a weather report for the
last day of the world (volcanic explosions, tsunamis, tornados, hurricanes,
earthquakes, or rogue meteors in the forecast).
7. Write a humorous poem about
the end of the world.
8. Write a post-apocalyptic poem.
9. If you don’t fancy writing
about the end of the world, try writing a poem about another kind of ending. Click the link below for some poems about endings by Laura Kasischke, Maxine Kumin, Gregory
Orr, Dana Levin, Tom Hennen, and Bob Hicok (from the NY Times).
Tip: As you’re writing, it’s
helpful to read your lines aloud. Hearing how the words and phrases sound can
help with editing and can also “generate” what you want to write next. Let the
sound of your poem “speak” to you as you write.
Examples: